Literature DB >> 34183606

Distant and Hidden Figures: Foregrounding Patients in the Development, Content, and Implementation of Entrustable Professional Activities.

Stefanie S Sebok-Syer1, Andrea Gingerich2, Eric S Holmboe3, Lorelei Lingard4, David A Turner5, Daniel J Schumacher6.   

Abstract

Entrustable professional activities (EPAs) describe activities that qualified professionals must be able to perform to deliver safe and effective care to patients. The entrustable aspect of EPAs can be used to assess learners through documentation of entrustment decisions, while the professional activity aspect can be used to map curricula. When used as an assessment framework, the entrustment decisions reflect supervisory judgments that combine trainees' relational autonomy and patient safety considerations. Thus, the design of EPAs incorporates the supervisor, trainee, and patient in a way that uniquely offers a link between educational outcomes and patient outcomes. However, achieving a patient-centered approach to education amidst both curricular and assessment obligations, educational and patient outcomes, and a supervisor-trainee-patient triad is not simple nor guaranteed. As medical educators continue to advance EPAs as part of their approach to competency-based medical education, the authors share a critical discussion of how patients are currently positioned in EPAs. In this article, the authors examine EPAs and discuss how their development, content, and implementation can result in emphasizing the trainee and/or supervisor while unintentionally distancing or hiding the patient. They consider creative possibilities for how EPAs might better integrate the patient as finding ways to better foreground the patient in EPAs holds promise for aligning educational outcomes and patient outcomes.
Copyright © 2021 by the Association of American Medical Colleges.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34183606     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000004094

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


  1 in total

1.  Patient-present teaching in the clinic: Effect on agency and professional behaviour.

Authors:  Bavenjit Cheema; Meredith Li; Daniel Ho; Erica Amari; Heather Buckley; Carolyn Canfield; Cary Cuncic; Laura Nimmon; Anneke Van Enk; Kiran Veerapen; Katherine M Wisener; Cheryl Lynn Holmes
Journal:  Med Educ       Date:  2021-09-06       Impact factor: 7.647

  1 in total

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