Literature DB >> 23887000

Academic medicine change management: the power of the liaison committee on medical education accreditation process.

Latha Chandran1, Howard B Fleit, A Laurie Shroyer.   

Abstract

Stony Brook University School of Medicine (SBU SOM) used a Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) site visit to design a change management approach that engaged students, revitalized faculty, and enabled significant, positive institutional transformation while flexibly responding to concurrent leadership transitions. This "from-the-trenches" description of novel LCME site-visit-related processes may provide an educational program quality improvement template for other U.S. medical schools. The SBU SOM site visit processes were proactively organized within five phases: (1) planning (4 months), (2) data gathering (12 months), (3) documentation (6 months), (4) visit readiness (2 months), and (5) visit follow-up (16 months). The authors explain the key activities associated with each phase.The SBU SOM internal leadership team designed new LCME-driven educational performance reports to identify challenging aspects of the educational program (e.g., timeliness of grades submitted, midcourse feedback completeness, clerkship grading variability across affiliate sites, learning environment or student mistreatment incidents). This LCME process increased institutional awareness, identified the school's LCME vulnerabilities, organized corrective actions, engaged key stakeholders in communication, ensured leadership buy-in, and monitored successes. The authors' strategies for success included establishing a strong internal LCME leadership team, proactively setting deadlines for all phases of the LCME process, assessing and communicating vulnerabilities and action plans, building multidisciplinary working groups, leveraging information technology, educating key stakeholders through meetings, retreats, and consultants, and conducting a mock site visit. The urgency associated with an impending high-stakes LCME site visit can facilitate positive, local, educational program quality improvement.

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23887000     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31829e7a25

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  3 in total

1.  From LCME probation to compliance: the Marshall University Joan C Edwards School of Medicine experience.

Authors:  Bobby Miller; Brian Dzwonek; Aaron McGuffin; Joseph I Shapiro
Journal:  Adv Med Educ Pract       Date:  2014-10-10

2.  Institutional Accreditation in Medical Education: The Experience of The Survey Visit Teams.

Authors:  Mohammad H Yarmohammadian; Elahe Khorsani; Roohangiz Norouzinia; Samaneh Mirzaei; Soheila Ehsanpour; Nikoo Yamani; Fatemeh Rezaei
Journal:  J Educ Health Promot       Date:  2020-02-28

3.  Applying North American medical education accreditation standards internationally in the United Arab Emirates.

Authors:  Sandra Kay Allen; Zahra S Baalawi; Ahmed Al Shoaibi; Hesham Wagih Gomma; John A Rock
Journal:  Med Educ Online       Date:  2022-12
  3 in total

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