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1.
J Contin Educ Health Prof ; 20(4): 247-51, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11201064

ABSTRACT

The expectations of attendees, the evaluations of themes, and the implications for continuing medical education (CME) identified by "Congress 2000: A Continuing Medical Education Summit on the Practices, Opportunities and Priorities for the New Millennium" are reviewed. A vision was identified with significant opportunities for CME to become a more valuable partner in and contributor to quality health care. The vision suggests that CME should be linked more closely to physician learning at the point of care and that technology might be used more successfully to address physician-learner needs by helping them to manage volumes of evidence for treating patients more effectively. At the same time, health care outcome data to analyze the need for and measure the effectiveness of educational interventions should become integrated into standards of practice for CME providers. Continuous improvement based on research about effective learning processes and outcomes should become an essential construct of the CME culture. Implications are summarized for the profession, organizational CME providers, individual CME professionals, and CME research from this new vision of CME crafted at Congress 2000.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Continuing , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Humans , Learning , Research , United States
2.
J Am Geriatr Soc ; 44(11): 1375-9, 1996 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8909356

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To better understand primary treatment recommendations and the variables that might influence treatment decisions of physicians who treat agitated dementia patients. DESIGN: A written cross-sectional survey of three physician groups (geriatric psychiatrists, primary care physicians, and neurologists) who typically treat agitated dementia patients in community settings. We used a written clinical vignette describing a home-bound, agitated dementia patient to ask respondents to provide information regarding their primary treatment recommendation and to estimate the degree to which clinically relevant variables might influence their treatment recommendation. Using principal component analysis, the original set of clinical variables was collapsed into a smaller set of composite factors that better defined the fundamental constructs of the variables that influenced decision making. Analyses compared primary treatment recommendations and factors influencing treatment recommendations by physician groups. PARTICIPANTS: The pool of survey respondents consisted of a random selection of 207 primary care physicians from western North Carolina, 147 geriatric psychiatrists obtained from the roster of the 1991 American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry, and 120 neurologists obtained from the roster of the American Board of Medical Specialties. The response rate was 65% for geriatric psychiatrists, 38% for primary care physicians, and 33% for neurologists. RESULTS: Differences in primary treatment recommendations by physician group were not found. Physicians, regardless of specialty, recommended neuroleptic medications as their primary intervention. When medication classes were collapsed into a single category, medications as a primary intervention exceeded 55% for all physician groups. Twenty-two percent of all respondents recommended psychosocial interventions as primary treatment strategies. The principal component analysis of clinical variables influencing treatment recommendations solved for five components that accounted for 64% of the variance. Comparing the five components by specialty groups failed to find significant differences, except for Factor 5, the "Hassle Factor." Primary care physicians were more likely to indicate that this component influenced their decision making than were the other physician groups. CONCLUSIONS: The findings indicate that physicians, regardless of specialty, are likely to use medication and to weight clinically relevant information in a similar fashion when managing agitated dementia patients.


Subject(s)
Decision Making , Dementia/drug therapy , Judgment , Physicians/psychology , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/statistics & numerical data , Psychomotor Agitation , Aged , Antipsychotic Agents/therapeutic use , Behavior Control , Cross-Sectional Studies , Dementia/psychology , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Family Practice , Female , Geriatric Psychiatry , Home Care Services , Homebound Persons , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neurology , North Carolina , Physicians/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires
3.
Acad Med ; 71(6): 644-6, 1996 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9125921

ABSTRACT

For more than 25 years, Bowman Gray has been placing fourth-year students in community-based primary care settings. Upon their return to campus, the students participate in a seminar in which they discuss issues raised by their primary care experiences. In these seminars, the students have consistently identified four key factors of clinical decision making that reflect current trends in medicine: quality, cost, ethics, and legal concerns. These factors influence the practice of medicine and affect the health care of individuals and communities. The authors discuss the nature of these factors and the physician's role and obligation in clinical decision making. Physicians have two responsibilities in this decision-making model: to be the primary advocates for quality health care and to ensure that there be a balance among the weights given the four factors. While physicians must take the lead in ensuring quality care, they must work in partnership with patients, payers, lawyers, ethicists, and the government. It is up to those responsible for the education of future physicians to see that students understand all the factors of clinical decision making and how best to balance them to fulfill their future obligations to patients.


Subject(s)
Clinical Clerkship , Decision Making , Models, Educational , Primary Health Care , Teaching/methods , Cost Control , Ethics, Medical , North Carolina , Physician-Patient Relations , Primary Health Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Quality of Health Care/legislation & jurisprudence
5.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg ; 53(4): 427-34, 1995 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7699498

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Recent studies have reported that tetracycline may induce chronic inflammatory responses in the adjacent soft tissues. The purpose of the present study was to determine if dry, powdered tetracycline evoked an inflammatory response in nerve tissue. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty male Sprague-Dawley rats were anesthetized and bilateral mental nerves were exposed. Half of the 40 nerves were intentionally injured by removing the epineurium, and the remaining nerves were uninjured. In a prospective, randomized, double-blind manner, equal volumes of color-matched, precoded tetracycline powder or Gelfoam (Upjohn, Kalamazoo, MI) powder control was placed in intimate contact with the nerves and sealed in polyethylene tubes. Forty-five days later the animals were killed and 5-micron sections of the nerves were prepared for histologic examination. The presence of epineurium, fascicular number, and fascicular area were measured. An inflammatory response in nerve tissue and the intrafascicular and epifascicular inflammatory index was measured by counting darkly stained nuclei with a Jandel Video Analysis System (Jandel Scientific, Corte Madera, CA). RESULTS: Experimental injury (ie, epineurectomy) of nerves resulted in a statistically significant increase in fascicular number (P = .034), but not in fascicular area. For the intrafascicular inflammatory index, there was a significant main effect for drug (P = .002) and injury (P = .002). Experimental injury in both Gelfoam control and tetracycline grouped nerves resulted in an increase in intrafascicular inflammation. There was no significant increase in intrafascicular inflammation in either Gelfoam control or tetracycline grouped nerves when the epineurium was intact. The combination of both tetracycline and epineurectomy resulted in the largest increase in intrafascicular inflammation found among the groups studied. For epifascicular inflammatory index, there was a significant main effect for drug (P = .003) and injury (P = .001) that mirrored the intrafascicular inflammatory pattern. CONCLUSION: The results of the present study suggest that dry, powdered tetracycline accentuates the inflammatory response in intrafascicular and epifascicular nerve tissue following epineurectomy. The maintenance of epineurium inhibited the inflammatory response in intrafascicular and epifascicular nerve tissues. Gel-foam was an inert material when placed against exposed nerve tissue. These findings suggest that tetracycline should not be placed in extraction sockets when injury of the inferior alveolar and/or lingual nerves are present.


Subject(s)
Neuritis/chemically induced , Tetracycline/toxicity , Administration, Topical , Animals , Chin/innervation , Double-Blind Method , Lingual Nerve Injuries , Male , Mandible/innervation , Powders , Prospective Studies , Random Allocation , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Tetracycline/administration & dosage , Tooth Extraction/adverse effects , Trigeminal Nerve Injuries
8.
Acad Med ; 67(7): 479-81, 1992 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1616567

ABSTRACT

The authors analyzed seniors' evaluations of the first three years of an intensive community health project at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University in 1988-89, 1989-90, and 1990-91. The project was designed to provide a public health perspective by having the students select, study, and propose solutions to a community health problem. Of 285 seniors, 240 (84%) completed evaluation questionnaires, using a five-point scale. The students' perceptions of the value of the project became steadily more favorable with each subsequent class; the classes of 1990 and 1991 rated the value of the project as being greater than that of most other experiences in their medical education. The project was more positively evaluated by the 106 responding students (44%) who planned to enter primary care specialties. The students who invested more time in the project also perceived its value to be greater.


Subject(s)
Community Medicine/education , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/standards , Public Health/education , Attitude , Curriculum , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/methods , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/organization & administration , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Humans , North Carolina , Organizational Objectives , Students, Medical/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires
9.
Bull Med Libr Assoc ; 78(2): 173-9, 1990 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2328366

ABSTRACT

The teachable moment is the time when a learner is ready to accept new information for use conceptually or in practice. Adult educators are always searching for that "moment" and models in which it has been incorporated. This article reviews the changing paradigm for continuing education of the health professional and the impact of information from the context of university-based providers of continuing education and information. Providers of continuing education and information face similar external opportunities and threats. The continuing education provider is a "marginal dweller" in the organization. The information provider (the library), although moving in that direction as technology affects the way information is accessed and managed, is much more a part of the core institutional mission. These parallel conditions provide opportunities for both organizations to work closely together to identify successful models to serve the "teachable moments" of all health care practitioners. A range of new library roles that suggest strong interaction with continuing educators is presented. Workable models are identified as well as characteristics of successful models. Suggestions for survival for continuing educators and librarians in "stalking the teachable moment" are discussed.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Continuing/trends , Information Services/trends , Forecasting , Humans , Libraries, Hospital , Libraries, Medical , United States
11.
Bull Med Libr Assoc ; 70(2): 216-23, 1982 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7039744

ABSTRACT

To meet the informational needs of health care practitioners and trainees in a four-county rural area of northwestern North Carolina, the eleven-member UNIFOUR Consortium was founded as a two-year experimental project from 1978 to 1980. The consortium has several unique features: (1) it is an organization of institutions, not libraries; (2) it employs its own professional librarian who manages a central library, coordinates consortium programs, and makes regular circuit visits to all affiliated institutions; (3) the central library, where the circuit is based, is a developing community hospital library, not an established academic medical center library; and (4) it is ultimately tied to the Northwest Area Health Education Center and that organization's emerging learning resources network, which includes the Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Library, two other subregional libraries, and the libraries of all member institutions. At the end of the experimental period in 1980, member institutions voted unanimously to continue the program and assume their share of the costs.


Subject(s)
Library Services/organization & administration , Rural Population , Libraries, Hospital/organization & administration , MEDLARS , North Carolina , United States
13.
Crossref Hum Resour Manage ; 10(5): 1-3, 1980.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10247876

ABSTRACT

Management development is important for all health care institutions, but for small and rural hospitals it could be the pivot point for survival in the 1980s. The program described here concentrates not only on developing managers' skills but also on building a team approach to hospital management.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/education , Hospital Administration , Area Health Education Centers , Hospital Bed Capacity, under 100 , North Carolina , Rural Health
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