| Literature DB >> 15380023 |
Gerald E Crites1, Richard J Schuster.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Practice management education continues to evolve, and little information exists regarding its curriculum design and effectiveness for resident education. We report the results of an exploratory study of a practice management curriculum for primary care residents.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15380023 PMCID: PMC520819 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-4-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Schedule of topics (in bold), teacher assignments, and objectives for the practice management seminar series
| Introduction to the Fee Ticket | |
| Health System Overview | |
| Reimbursable Diagnoses in Primary Care Using Modifiers | |
| Financial Goals | |
| Insurance Contracts | |
| Partnerships Structures: Solo, Small Group, Multi-specialty Practices | |
| Finding Positions and Writing CVs | |
| The A/R Sheet | |
| Minimizing Expenses in Primary Care | |
| Staffing Needs Assessment | |
| Minimizing Medico-legal Risk in Practice | |
| Understanding CLEA, OSHA, and HIPPA |
Resident self-assessed practice management skills (A) and curriculum evaluation (B) (modified Likert scale: 1 = strongly disagree and, 5 = strongly agree)
| Results from 12 item survey | 2.62 (2.27 – 2.97) | 3.65 (3.41–4.08) |
| Practice management series was effective in teaching me basic practice management knowledge | NA | 4.13 (0.61) |
| I feel more confident in my own practice skills because of this curriculum | NA | 3.96 (0.45) |
| I feel practice management curriculum should be incorporated into primary care curriculum | NA | 4.67 (0.65) |
| I would be interested in expanding my primary care curriculum to include more practice management education | NA | 4.67 (0.49) |
Figure 1Practice knowledge test results (mean and 95% CI): before (0-month) and after (12-month) the course