| Literature DB >> 29117817 |
Shou Ling Leong1, Joan Cangiarella2, Tonya Fancher3, Lisa Dodson4, Colleen Grochowski5, Vicky Harnik2, Carol Hustedde6, Betsy Jones7, Christina Kelly8, Allison Macerollo9, Annette C Reboli10, Melvin Rosenfeld2, Kristen Rundell11, Tina Thompson12, Robert Whyte13, Martin Pusic14.
Abstract
Medical education is undergoing significant transformation. Many medical schools are moving away from the concept of seat time to competency-based education and introducing flexibility in the curriculum that allows individualization. In response to rising student debt and the anticipated physician shortage, 35% of US medical schools are considering the development of accelerated pathways. The roadmap described in this paper is grounded in the experiences of the Consortium of Accelerated Medical Pathway Programs (CAMPP) members in the development, implementation, and evaluation of one type of accelerated pathway: the three-year MD program. Strategies include developing a mission that guides curricular development - meeting regulatory requirements, attaining institutional buy-in and resources necessary to support the programs, including student assessment and mentoring - and program evaluation. Accelerated programs offer opportunities to innovate and integrate a mission benefitting students and the public. ABBREVIATIONS: CAMPP: Consortium of accelerated medical pathway programs; GME: Graduate medical education; LCME: Liaison committee on medical education; NRMP: National residency matching program; UME: Undergraduate medical education.Entities:
Keywords: Medical education; accelerated medical degree; accelerated pathways; innovation in medical education
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29117817 PMCID: PMC5706474 DOI: 10.1080/10872981.2017.1396172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Best practices for implementing a three-year accelerated program from the Consortium of Accelerated Medical Pathway Programs (CAMPP) schools
| Steps in creating a three-year program | Mission | Admission model | Curricular plan | Policies for advancement and deceleration | Remediation program | Mentor program | Partnerships with residency programs | Program evaluation | Ensure sufficient resources | Get buy-in and address concerns | Innovate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Address shortage of primary care physicians | Admission at matriculation | Summer classes | Must meet school policy for | Establish policies for remediation to maintain program excellence while providing a fair chance for the students to succeed | Each student assigned a traditional advisor, an accelerated pathway advisor, and a departmental advisor | Conditional acceptance to affiliated residency program | Student performance (exam scores, narratives, course and clerkship grades, Step scores) is tracked. | Institutional leadership and financial support | Obtain approval from key institutional stakeholders (Dean, Curriculum Committee, Educational Affairs, residency program directors and finance office) and LCME | Longitudinal integrated clerkship | |
| Address workforce shortage of the state (psychiatry, general surgery, primary care and underserved areas) | Delayed admission – year 1 of medical school | Additional courses alongside traditional curriculum | Deceleration addressed in grading, promotions, and appeals policy | Decelerate to four-year curriculum for significant academic issue or specialty choice areas. Remain on regional campus after deceleration | Faculty navigators serve as advisors. Need to connect to main campus for specialty academic advising | Students can apply to any residency programs | Student performance, specific student survey, and residency program director surveys | HRSA and external support | Invite faculty from successfully launched accelerated programs to your institution | Distance | |
| Reduce student debt | Dual paths- at matriculation and at year 1 of medical school | Problem-based learning School: 3, 5, Case-based learning school: 4 | Final determination about advancement or deceleration made in December of third year | In addition to traditional mentoring program, students are assigned a primary care physician coach. | UME-GME continuum of training and tracking | Research assessment pilot using Wise-Oncall and simulation | Philanthropy, community support for regional campus | Patient-centered medical home curriculum | |||
| Individualized pathway | Community engaged admission process | Early clinical exposure to patients | Each student has a faculty mentor and a resident mentor for their primary care specialty | Residency program director is part of the Accelerated Pathway team and takes part in the interviews | OSCE and simulation evaluation | State funding for program that allows tuition scholarships | |||||
| Improve educational efficiency toward orthopaedics residency | Admission to the entire class | Curriculum on community engagement, population health | Mentor includes Dean in medical school, Vice-chair of department, faculty member, resident and graduates of the program | Opportunities for students to be integrated into the GME programs | Tracking performance in UME and GME. | Supported by the Department of Orthopaedics | |||||
| Consider relevance of clinical experience / | Admission after preclinical and half of the clinical year | Competency-based education | Wellness tracked through regular meetings with students. | ||||||||
| Reprioritize opportunities for meaningful research | Primary care focused, team-based care |
Figure 1.Creating an accelerated three-year medical education program.