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1.
Gerontol Geriatr Educ ; 28(3): 59-72, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18215988

ABSTRACT

Virginia Commonwealth University developed an enhanced medical student geriatric curriculum that includes required home visits and nursing home visits for second year students (180 per year), an annual Forum on Aging for all first and second year students, and small group exercises. We added 30 hours of basic science material to pre-clinical courses and increased clinical exposure to geriatricians in third and fourth years. Student satisfaction with individual experiences was high. Persistent effects of "high valence" required activities, where emotion played a role, was shown by post-pre survey techniques and focus groups. Fourth year AAMC exit questionnaire items in areas addressed by this curriculum improved markedly between 2002 and 2006, while an internal control changed much less.


Subject(s)
Geriatrics/education , Aged , Clinical Competence , Consumer Behavior , Education, Medical/organization & administration , Homes for the Aged/organization & administration , House Calls , Humans , Nursing Homes/organization & administration , Patient Care Team/organization & administration , Program Evaluation
2.
Acad Med ; 82(10 Suppl): S30-3, 2007 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17895684

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Students' willingness to provide candid feedback about faculty in student-preceptor pairs is unknown. Strategies addressing this in U.S. medical schools have not been reported. This study describes student comfort in evaluating preceptors and how medical schools obtain/use evaluations of preceptors. METHOD: First- and second-year medical students at Virginia Commonwealth University completed a survey at midyear and year end. A Web-based survey of U.S. medical schools was conducted. RESULTS: Two hundred eighty-two (78%) students and 84 (70%) medical schools responded. Most students felt comfortable providing feedback to program faculty (95%), whereas fewer felt comfortable with the preceptor (77%). Students commented on both the importance and awkwardness of giving feedback. Approximately 75% of medical schools agreed that lack of anonymity limits student candor on preceptorship evaluations. CONCLUSIONS: Understanding the impact of one-to-one ratio on student evaluations of faculty may enable programs to develop more effective evaluation strategies.


Subject(s)
Attitude , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/standards , Faculty, Medical/standards , Preceptorship , Students, Medical/psychology , Teaching/standards , Clinical Competence , Educational Measurement , Humans , Program Evaluation , Retrospective Studies
3.
J Am Geriatr Soc ; 55(2): 300-4, 2007 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17302670

ABSTRACT

Generalist physicians provide most primary care for older people. Increasingly, undergraduate clinical education occurs in community sites. Hence, community-based generalist faculty members need continuing education in geriatrics to support clinical practice and teaching. The Geriatrics Scholars Program provided continuing medical education (CME) in geriatrics over a 3-year period to 88 participants. Sixty physicians completed 30 or more hours of education and were designated Geriatrics Scholars. On an anonymous exit survey, Scholars reported being better equipped to care for elderly patients and to teach geriatrics and improved patient care in specific aspects of geriatrics, including medication use, cognition, and functional assessment. In summary, community-based generalist faculty who participated in a substantial, 3-year program of geriatrics CME reported that their care of older people and their teaching of geriatrics were enhanced.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Continuing/methods , Geriatrics/education , Physicians, Family/education , Adult , Community Health Services , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Program Evaluation
4.
Med Educ Online ; 11(1): 4589, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28253772

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Passage of the United States Medical Licensing Exam (USMLE) is required to obtain a medical license in the United States. Currently the majority of US medical schools require passage of USMLE Step 1 for either promotion to the third year or graduation from medical school. Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine (VCUSOM) requires that students take the USMLE but does not require passing of USMLE Step 1 for promotion or graduation. This policy enabled the authors to analyze performance outcomes during clinical rotations and monitor the residency match for a group of students who failed USMLE Step 1 on the first attempt. METHODS: Third year clerkship grades and residency match results were reviewed for 64 students of the graduating classes of 1999-2005 who failed Step 1 on the first attempt. An equal number of students who passed Step 1 were randomly selected from each class as a comparison group. Average clinical performance ratings, NBME subject exam scores and final third year clerkship grades for the two groups were compared. Residency match rates and specialty certification were also compared. RESULTS: The USMLE Fail Group had more Pass and fewer Honors clerkship grades than the comparison group. Subject exam scores were significantly lower in the USMLE Fail Group in all clerkships. Clinical performance ratings were significantly lower in the Fail group in three out of six clerkships: Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, and Psychiatry. However, 82% of the USMLE Fail Group later passed USMLE Step 1 and 2. Fifty-nine of the 64 students in the USMLE Fail Group matched for a residency, whereas all of the students in the Pass Group matched for a residency. CONCLUSION: Students who fail USMLE Step 1 have lower final clerkship grades due in part to lower NBME subject exam scores. The majority of these students, however, successfully pass USMLE Step 1 prior to graduation, go on to graduate medical training, and become board certified in their specialty.

5.
Med Educ ; 39(4): 370-9, 2005 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15813759

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The practice of medicine demands that its physician practitioners are self-directed, life-long learners. The Self-Directed Learning Readiness Scale (SDLRS) intends to measure adults' readiness to engage in self-directed learning. PURPOSE: The present study assesses the underlying factor structure of the SDLRS for a sample of entering medical students. METHODS: Over a period of 6 years, 972 first year medical students at the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine completed the SDLRS. To summarise the inter-relationships among variables, a principal axis factor analysis with oblique rotation was used on the 58 SDLRS items. A series of confirmatory factor analyses using LISREL 8.54 was performed to further examine the measurement model underlying the SDLRS. RESULTS: A 4-factor confirmatory model representing 4 correlated substantive factors and a reverse coding method factor fits these data well. CONCLUSIONS: Medical educators should hold limited expectations of the SDLRS to measure medical students' readiness to engage in self-directed learning. The definitions and theoretical assumptions that inform readiness for self-directed learning should be reconsidered. Alternative approaches to studying self-directed learning should be explored.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Continuing/methods , Learning , Personal Autonomy , Educational Measurement , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Humans , Students, Medical/psychology
6.
Acad Med ; 79(10 Suppl): S36-9, 2004 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15383384

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This study tested the predictive validity of variables related to student characteristics of the Bland-Meurer Model of Career Decision-Making. METHOD: A study was conducted using Association of American Medical Colleges' Graduate Student Questionnaire and career data from one medical school. Logistic regression analyses generated predictive models of primary care residency choice, including family medicine, general internal medicine, and pediatrics for 555 medical school graduates over five years. RESULTS: Variables predictive of primary care residency choice were gender; student ratings of psychiatry, surgery, and internal medicine clerkships; not having participated in a research project in medical school; attitudes toward "the changing health care system on physicians" and "access to medical care"; and planned practice in a medically underserved area. Results differed for each field within each residency choice. CONCLUSIONS: The Bland-Meurer Model may be used for variable selection in multivariate predictive models of family medicine, internal medicine and pediatrics residency choice. The authors' results may help guide admissions decisions, while providing medical educators and health care policymakers with a clearer picture of residency choice and a better understanding of how to meet the demands of selected patient populations.


Subject(s)
Career Choice , Family Practice/education , Internship and Residency , Models, Educational , Primary Health Care , Adult , Attitude , Clinical Clerkship , Decision Making , Delivery of Health Care , Female , Forecasting , General Surgery/education , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Internal Medicine/education , Male , Medically Underserved Area , Pediatrics/education , Psychiatry/education , Research/education , Sex Factors , Students, Medical
7.
J Contin Educ Health Prof ; 23(2): 68-80, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12866326

ABSTRACT

Entering the 1960s, more than half of the medical doctors in the United States were family physicians, pediatricians, or general internists. Today, about one-third of all U.S. physicians are primary care practitioners. Although opinions vary on the optimal ratio of primary care to specialty physicians, in the mid-1990s, the consensus among leaders in medicine was that more primary care physicians would be needed to ensure access to quality care. The target output of graduates was set for a minimum of 50% primary care physicians, and medical school admission committees responded. The present study examines research related to career decision making in primary care medicine. We address career decision making in primary care with the expectation that selection of a medical residency is based on multiple factors, and multivariate statistical techniques comprise the most appropriate statistical procedure for developing predictive models of medical student residency choice. Additional multivariate studies for simultaneous analysis of multiple dependent and multiple independent variables are needed to determine whether health policy planners and medical schools should continue to address the distribution of primary care physicians through medical school admissions. Further to enabling prediction, researchers must renew efforts to base investigations on theoretical models, summarizing and organizing previous research, and providing one another with means to focus future studies while building on previous work.


Subject(s)
Career Choice , Internship and Residency , Physicians, Family/supply & distribution , Primary Health Care , Decision Making , Family Practice/education , Health Policy , Humans , Internal Medicine/economics , Michigan , Multivariate Analysis , Pediatrics/economics , Workforce
8.
Radiol Technol ; 73(6): 507-10, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12154655

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this investigation was to report the life span of Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecalis and Staphylococcus aureus on 3 types of radiographic imaging receptors currently used in diagnostic imaging departments in the United States. Kodak 400 speed, Dupont 400 speed and Fuji computed radiography cassettes were inoculated with the 3 bacteria, then placed in an incubation cabinet and cultured for a period of 2 weeks. All 3 cassettes revealed confluent growth with no noticeable reduction in bacterial numbers for the entire test period. This study verifies that common potentially pathogenic bacteria can survive for prolonged periods on radiographic imaging cassettes. Therefore, effective cleaning regimens are of fundamental importance in controlling and preventing potential nosocomial transmission in the diagnostic imaging department.


Subject(s)
Enterococcus faecalis/isolation & purification , Escherichia coli/isolation & purification , Staphylococcus aureus/isolation & purification , X-Ray Film/microbiology , Equipment Contamination , Humans , Radiography/instrumentation
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