Literature DB >> 28857789

Competency-Based Medical Education and the Ghost of Kuhn: Reflections on the Messy and Meaningful Work of Transformation.

Eric S Holmboe1.   

Abstract

The transition, if not transformation, to outcomes-based medical education likely represents a paradigm shift struggling to be realized. Paradigm shifts are messy and difficult but ultimately meaningful if done successfully. This struggle has engen dered tension and disagreements, with many of these disagreements cast as either-or polarities. There is little disagreement, however, that the health care system is not effectively achieving the triple aim for all patients. Much of the tension and polarity revolve around how more effectively to prepare students and residents to work in and help change a complex health care system.Competencies were an initial attempt to facilitate this shift by creating frameworks of essential abilities needed by physicians. However, implementation of competencies has proven to be difficult. Entrustable professional activities (EPAs) in undergraduate and graduate medical education and Milestones in graduate medical education are recent concepts being tried and studied as approaches to guide the shift to outcomes. Their primary purpose is to help facilitate implementation of an outcomes-based approach by creating shared mental models of the competencies, which in turn can help to improve curricula and assessment. Understanding whether and how EPAs and Milestones effectively facilitate the shift to outcomes has been and will continue to be an iterative and ongoing reflective process across the entire medical education community using lessons from implementation and complexity science. In this Invited Commentary, the author reflects on what got the community to this point and some sources of tension involved in the struggle to move to outcomes-based education.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 28857789     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001866

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


  10 in total

1.  Entrustment Ratings in Internal Medicine Training: Capturing Meaningful Supervision Decisions or Just Another Rating?

Authors:  Rose Hatala; Shiphra Ginsburg; Karen E Hauer; Andrea Gingerich
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2019-05       Impact factor: 5.128

2.  Core competencies for a biomedical laboratory scientist - a Delphi study.

Authors:  Maria M Stollenwerk; Anna Gustafsson; Gudrun Edgren; Petri Gudmundsson; Magnus Lindqvist; Tommy Eriksson
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2022-06-20       Impact factor: 3.263

Review 3.  Curriculum reform: Why? What? How? and how will we know it works?

Authors:  Shmuel Reis
Journal:  Isr J Health Policy Res       Date:  2018-06-07

4.  The relationship between students' perception of the educational environment and their subjective happiness.

Authors:  Dong-Mi Yoo; Do-Hwan Kim
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2019-11-08       Impact factor: 2.463

5.  Competencies and Feedback on Internal Medicine Residents' End-of-Rotation Assessments Over Time: Qualitative and Quantitative Analyses.

Authors:  Ara Tekian; Yoon Soo Park; Sarette Tilton; Patrick F Prunty; Eric Abasolo; Fred Zar; David A Cook
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2019-12       Impact factor: 6.893

6.  Designing health professional education curricula using systems thinking perspectives.

Authors:  Priya Khanna; Chris Roberts; Andrew Stuart Lane
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 2.463

7.  OSCE rater cognition - an international multi-centre qualitative study.

Authors:  Sarah Hyde; Christine Fessey; Katharine Boursicot; Rhoda MacKenzie; Deirdre McGrath
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2022-01-03       Impact factor: 2.463

8.  The changing face of postgraduate anaesthesia teaching curriculum: Need of the hour!

Authors:  Naveen Malhotra; Thomas Koshy; Pradeep Bhatia; Rashmi Datta; Divya Jain; Ramesh Koppal
Journal:  Indian J Anaesth       Date:  2022-02-03

Review 9.  Overcoming the barriers to implementation of competence-based medical education in post-graduate medical education: a narrative literature review.

Authors:  Jayson M Stoffman
Journal:  Med Educ Online       Date:  2022-12

10.  Entrustable Professional Activities: Correlation of Entrustment Assessments of Pediatric Residents With Concurrent Subcompetency Milestones Ratings.

Authors:  Jerry G Larrabee; Dewesh Agrawal; Franklin Trimm; Mary Ottolini
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2020-02
  10 in total

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