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Graduate Medical and Dental Education

Institutional Foundational Curriculum for First Year Residents

Academic Year 2004-2005

Purpose

As a Sponsoring Institution for Graduate Medical Education, establish a minimum curriculum that ensures each resident receive an introductory foundational educational experience related to general competencies in Patient Care, Medical Knowledge, Practice-Based Learning and Improvement, Interpersonal and Communication Skills, Professionalism and Systems-Based Practice as is now required by the ACGME.

The Foundational Curriculum is NOT a substitute for each individual program’s curriculum for these general competencies as required by its RRC.

Objectives

a. To ensure parity among all first year residents as they begin the process of acquiring foundational knowledge, skills, behavior and attitudes in the above competencies.

b. To encourage individual departments to use this foundational educational experience to enhance subsequent specialty-specific education in these competencies as required by its RRC.

c. To implement a foundational curriculum with minimal disruption of individual department teaching and service obligations and to comply with Resident Duty Hours Requirements.

d. To facilitate institutional GME re-accreditation.

Methods

1. The course is limited to first year residents: a first year resident is defined as the first year at the UT Graduate School of Medicine.

2. The entire course will be given over 1½ days.

3. Day #1 will be on June 30, 2003 from 8:30 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. and will be held at the UT Conference Center. A total of 7 lectures will be presented on Day 1.

4. Day 2 will be on January 08, 2004 from 8:30 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. and will be held on the UT Medical Center Campus. Four lectures will be presented.

5. The following lectures/seminars related to the mandated general competencies will be presented:


Physician-Patient Communication
• Professionalism
• Bioethics
• Preventive Medicine and Global Health
• Practice-Risk Management
• Physician Impairment
• Compliance
• Care Management
• Population-Based Care/Diversity and Cultural    Effectiveness
• Research and Information Management: The Natural    Extension of Patient Care
• Dealing with Managed Care

6. Each presentation will be limited to 50 minutes with no more than 5- 6 specific foundational learning objectives. Up to 10 minutes will be allowed for interactive questions.

7. If desired, a lecturer can distribute a Supplement Handout to expand the foundational educational experience not included in the oral presentation.

8. Copies of presentation slides will be a required component.

9. A Post-presentation examination and resident survey for each presentation will be administered to assess lecture content and teaching skills of the presenter. Each examination will be limited to no more than 10 key questions.

10. Given the compression of the course, to ensure the fidelity of each examination, a 15-minute examination period will follow each three or four presentations. The examinations are to be turned in on the day administered.

11. To lay the foundation for the concept of life-long learning and to assess retention of the Foundational Curriculum plus subsequent individual program experiences in the general competencies, a composite examination consisting of 2-3 questions from each original topical examination will be distributed to the participating residents the first week in May 2004. The completed examination is to be returned to GME by the end of May 2004.

12. All oral presentations will be posted on the GSM Web site. However, videotaping will not be needed in this format.

13. The lecture schedule for the Curriculum is attached.



 

Graduate Medical and Dental Education


1924 Alcoa Highway
Knoxville, TN 37920
Office – 865-305-9339
800-596-7249
Email - gme@mc.utmck.edu

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