Literature DB >> 16213903

Six core competencies and seven deadly sins: a virtues-based approach to the new guidelines for graduate medical education.

Gregory Luke Larkin1, Mary Pat McKay, Peter Angelos.   

Abstract

As part of efforts afoot to improve the overall quality of physician training, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has endorsed a set of competencies that will be the blueprint for outcomes-based graduate medical education for years to come. While the spirit of this new law is taking shape, the letter remains largely unwritten. To bridge this gap, administrators of programs from all specialties must determine how the core competencies will be taught, evaluated, modeled, and enforced within their respective programs. This paper summarizes these challenges, in particular for surgical programs, and focuses constructively on the modeling/enforcement approach, describing key characteristics that programs should pursue and cultivate (virtues) as well as the signal prohibitions (vices) that both trainees and trainers must avoid. Regardless of specialty or programmatic particulars, virtues and vices may be used to define a context in which general competencies may be understood, and yield operational guidance upon which ultimate discussions of evaluation, remediation, and graduation may be predicated.

Keywords:  Bioethics and Professional Ethics; Health Care and Public Health

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16213903     DOI: 10.1016/j.surg.2005.03.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Surgery        ISSN: 0039-6060            Impact factor:   3.982


  4 in total

1.  Care and competence in medical practice: Francis Peabody confronts Jason Posner.

Authors:  James A Marcum
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2011-05

2.  Translational education: tools for implementing the CanMEDS competencies in Canadian urology residency training.

Authors:  J J Mickelson; A E Macneily
Journal:  Can Urol Assoc J       Date:  2008-08       Impact factor: 1.862

3.  Applying global frameworks to assessment in medical education: an example of a nationally produced curriculum for cancer education.

Authors:  Darren L Starmer; Elaine Chapman; Michael J Millward
Journal:  J Cancer Educ       Date:  2010-09       Impact factor: 2.037

4.  What can we learn from narratives in medical education?

Authors:  Samir Johna; Brandon Woodward; Sunal Patel
Journal:  Perm J       Date:  2014
  4 in total

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