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5.
Acad Med ; 95(10): 1492-1494, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32520751

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic has presented unprecedented challenges and opportunities for medical schools in the United States. In this Invited Commentary, the authors describe a unique collaboration between the University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS), the only public medical school in the state; the University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center (UMMMC); and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Through this partnership, UMMS was able to graduate fourth-year medical students 2 months early and deploy them to UMMMC to care for patients and alleviate workforce shortages during the COVID-19 surge, which peaked in Massachusetts in April 2020. The authors describe how they determined if students had fulfilled graduation requirements to graduate early, what commencement and the accompanying awards ceremony looked like this year as virtual events, the special emergency 90-day limited license these new graduates were given to practice at UMMMC during this time, and the impact these new physicians had in the hospital allowing residents and attendings to be redeployed to care for COVID-19 patients.


Subject(s)
Health Workforce/legislation & jurisprudence , Licensure/legislation & jurisprudence , Pandemics/legislation & jurisprudence , Physicians/supply & distribution , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Betacoronavirus , COVID-19 , Coronavirus Infections , Humans , Massachusetts/epidemiology , Physicians/legislation & jurisprudence , Pneumonia, Viral , SARS-CoV-2 , Schools, Medical , United States
6.
PLoS One ; 14(11): e0224675, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31682639

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 1 and Step 2 Clinical Knowledge (CK) are important for trainee medical knowledge assessment and licensure, medical school program assessment, and residency program applicant screening. Little is known about how USMLE performance varies between institutions. This observational study attempts to identify institutions with above-predicted USMLE performance, which may indicate educational programs successful at promoting students' medical knowledge. METHODS: Self-reported institution-level data was tabulated from publicly available US News and World Report and Association of American Medical Colleges publications for 131 US allopathic medical schools from 2012-2014. Bivariate and multiple linear regression were performed. The primary outcome was institutional mean USMLE Step 1 and Step 2 CK scores outside a 95% prediction interval (≥2 standard deviations above or below predicted) based on multiple regression accounting for students' prior academic performance. RESULTS: Eighty-nine US medical schools (54 public, 35 private) reported complete USMLE scores over the three-year study period, representing over 39,000 examinees. Institutional mean grade point average (GPA) and Medical College Admission Test score (MCAT) achieved an adjusted R2 of 72% for Step 1 (standardized ßMCAT 0.7, ßGPA 0.2) and 41% for Step 2 CK (standardized ßMCAT 0.5, ßGPA 0.3) in multiple regression. Using this regression model, 5 institutions were identified with above-predicted institutional USMLE performance, while 3 institutions had below-predicted performance. CONCLUSIONS: This exploratory study identified several US allopathic medical schools with significant above- or below-predicted USMLE performance. Although limited by self-reported data, the findings raise questions about inter-institutional USMLE performance parity, and thus, educational parity. Additional work is needed to determine the etiology and robustness of the observed performance differences.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence/statistics & numerical data , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/statistics & numerical data , Educational Measurement/statistics & numerical data , Licensure/statistics & numerical data , Schools, Medical/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Cross-Sectional Studies , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/legislation & jurisprudence , Female , Humans , Schools, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Self Report/statistics & numerical data , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Students, Medical/statistics & numerical data , United States
7.
Perspect Med Educ ; 8(6): 353-359, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31642049

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Despite the use of 'patient ownership' as an embodiment of professionalism and increasing concerns over its loss among trainees, how its development in residents has been affected by duty hour regulations has not been well described. In this qualitative study, we aim to outline the key features of patient ownership in internal medicine, factors enabling its development, and how these have been affected by the adoption of a night float system to comply with duty hour regulations. METHODS: In this qualitative descriptive study, we interviewed 18 residents and 12 faculty internists at one university centre and conducted a thematic analysis of the data focused on the concept of patient ownership. RESULTS: We identified three key features of patient ownership: personal concern for patients, professional capacity for autonomous decision-making, and knowledge of patients' issues. Within the context of a night float system, factors that facilitate development of patient ownership include improved fitness for duty and more consistent interactions with patients/families resulting from working the same shift over consecutive days (or nights). Conversely, the increase in patient handovers, if done poorly, is a potential threat to patient ownership development. Trainees often struggle to develop ownership when autonomy is not supported with supervision and when role-modelling by faculty is lacking. DISCUSSION: These features of patient ownership can be used to frame discussions when coaching trainees. Residency programs should be mindful of the downstream effects of shift-based scheduling. We propose strategies to optimize factors that enable trainee development of patient ownership.


Subject(s)
Faculty, Medical/psychology , Internship and Residency/legislation & jurisprudence , Patient Handoff , Shift Work Schedule/psychology , Students, Medical/psychology , Adult , Female , Humans , Internal Medicine/education , Internship and Residency/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Qualitative Research , Shift Work Schedule/legislation & jurisprudence , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence
8.
Health Hum Rights ; 21(1): 141-147, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31239622

ABSTRACT

The Philippine community internship program, originally created to supplement the country's thinning health workforce while providing training to student doctors, poses a legal and ethical challenge for medical interns. Inherent characteristics of the program-such as financial disparities and burdens, the lack of supervision by senior doctors, the competence of student doctors, and short rotation times-can predispose interns to cause harm to the patients and communities they serve. As currently designed, the internship program has the capacity to leave interns unsupervised, at risk of legal ramifications, constantly questioning the correctness of their interventions, and perpetually straddling conflicting role virtues. By failing to ensure that the community internship program has appropriate safeguards in place, the government not only jeopardizes the welfare of interns but also threatens the quality and continuity of care that patients and communities receive, potentially violating their right to the highest attainable standard of health. One medical school recently started a novel internship program that could address the issues mentioned.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence/standards , Internship and Residency/standards , Patient Rights , Students, Medical , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/standards , Humans , Patient Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Philippines , Rural Population , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence
10.
Acta Med Port ; 32(1): 11-13, 2019 Feb 01.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30753797

ABSTRACT

The authors address the legal void that exists regarding medical student access to clinical records and health information that local healthcare organizations hold under legal and institutional custody. They develop a legal thesis that configures the creation of medical student professional secrecy and its connection with the duty of confidentiality as assumptions that underlie the medical student's right to access and reuse health information. Medical students have the legitimacy to access health information and clinical records, as they bear an unequivocal informational, legitimate, constitutionally protected and sufficiently relevant need. They conclude that the legislature must work together with universities and hospital institutions to legally establish the concept of Medical Student Professional Secrecy, its link to the duty of confidentiality and the right of the medical student to access and reuse health information. Furthermore, it must do so in a specific legal act and in the precise terms of the text approved unanimously by the Council of Portuguese Medical Schools, by the National Council of Medical Ethics and Deontology, by the National Council of the Portuguese Medical Association and by its President.


Os autores abordam o vazio legal que existe, no acesso, por parte de estudantes de medicina, aos registos clínicos, à informação de saúde, na posse e à guarda legal e institucional das unidades de saúde. Por outro lado, desenvolvem uma tese jurídica que configura a criação do segredo do estudante de medicina e a sua vinculação ao dever de sigilo, como pressupostos que fundamentam o direito do estudante de medicina em aceder e reutilizar informação de saúde. O estudante de medicina tem legitimidade para aceder a informação de saúde, a registos clínicos, já que é inequívoco ser portador de uma necessidade informacional, legítima, constitucionalmente protegida e suficientemente relevante. Concluem, que o poder legislativo se associe às instituições, universitárias e hospitalares, instituindo, por diploma legal, o Segredo do Estudante de Medicina, a sua vinculação ao dever de sigilo e o direito do estudante de medicina em aceder e reutilizar informação de saúde. E deve fazê-lo, em diploma específico, nos precisos termos do texto aprovado, por unanimidade, pelo Conselho das Escolas Médicas Portuguesas, pelo Conselho Nacional de Ética e Deontologia Médicas, pelo Conselho Nacional da Ordem dos Médicos e pelo Bastonário da referida Ordem.


Subject(s)
Access to Information/legislation & jurisprudence , Confidentiality/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Records, Personal , Schools, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Education, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , European Union , Health Facilities/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Portugal
11.
Dev World Bioeth ; 19(3): 169-179, 2019 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30548442

ABSTRACT

Compulsory (health) service contracts have recently received considerable attention in the normative literature. The service contracts are considered and offered as a permissible and liberal alternative to emigration restrictions if individuals relinquish their right to exit via contract in exchange for the state-funded tertiary education. To that end, the recent normative literature on the service programmes has particularly focused on discussing the circumstances or conditions in which the contracts should be signed, so that they are morally binding on the part of the skilled workers. However, little attention is devoted to the relevance of the right to exit for the debate on compulsory service programmes. In this paper, I argue that even if the service contracts are voluntary, and thus the would-be medical students voluntarily relinquish their right to exit, the reasons behind the right should be taken into account for the contracts to be morally valid. A clear understanding of the right to exit is a must in order not to breach its basic components and for the service contracts to be morally binding. To that end, I provide two accounts of the reasons to value the right to exit by presenting Patti Lenard's discussion of the right to exit and by reconstructing James Griffin's account of human rights. I conclude by offering brief ethical considerations for compulsory health service programmes grounded in the reasons to value the right to exit.


Subject(s)
Contracts , Emigration and Immigration/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Personnel/education , Health Personnel/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Services/ethics , Health Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Africa South of the Sahara , Civil Rights , Education, Medical/ethics , Health Workforce/ethics , Health Workforce/legislation & jurisprudence , Human Rights , Humans , Moral Obligations , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence
13.
Acad Med ; 93(12): 1770-1773, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29794528

ABSTRACT

Although Title IX, the federal law prohibiting sexual harassment in educational institutions, was enacted in 1972, sexual harassment continues to be distressingly common in medical training. In addition, many women who experience sexual harassment do not report their experiences to authorities within the medical school.In this article, the authors review the literature on the prevalence of sexual harassment in medical schools since Title IX was enacted and on the cultural and legal changes that have occurred during that period that have affected behaviors. These changes include decreased tolerance for harassing behavior; increased legal responsibility assigned to institutions; and a significant increase in the number of female medical students, residents, and faculty. The authors then discuss persisting barriers to reporting sexual harassment, including fears of reprisals and retaliation, especially covert retaliation. They define covert retaliation as vindictive comments made by a person accused of sexual harassment about his or her accuser in a confidential setting, such as a grant review, award selection, or search committee.The authors conclude by highlighting institutional and organizational approaches to decreasing sexual harassment and overt retaliation, and they propose other approaches to decreasing covert retaliation. These initiatives include encouraging senior faculty members to intervene and file bystander complaints when they witness inappropriate comments or behaviors as well as group reporting when multiple women are harassed by the same person.


Subject(s)
Mandatory Reporting , Schools, Medical/statistics & numerical data , Sexual Harassment/psychology , Students, Medical/psychology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Prevalence , Schools, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Sexual Harassment/legislation & jurisprudence , Sexual Harassment/statistics & numerical data , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , United States/epidemiology
15.
GMS J Med Educ ; 34(2): Doc25, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28584873

ABSTRACT

Objective: Competence orientation, often based on the CanMEDS model, has become an important goal for modern curricula in medical education. The National Competence Based Catalogue of Learning Objectives for Undergraduate Medical Education (NKLM) has been adopted in Germany. However, it is currently unknown whether the vision of competence orientation has also reached the licensing examination procedures. Methods: Therefore, a prospective, descriptive, single-centre, exemplary study design was applied to evaluate 4051 questions/tasks (from 28 examiners at 7 two-day licensing oral-practical exams) for undergraduate medical students at the University of Ulm. The oral and practical questions/tasks as well as the real bedside assessment were assigned to specific competence roles (NKLM section I), categories (NKLM section II) and taxonomy levels of learning domains. Results: Numerous questions/tasks were set per candidate (day 1/2: 70±24/86±19 questions) in the licensing oral-practical exam. Competence roles beyond the "medical expert" were scarcely considered. Furthermore, practical and communication skills at the bedside were hardly addressed (less than 3/15 min). Strikingly, there was a significant predominance of questions with a low-level taxonomy. Conclusions: The data indicate a misalignment of competence-oriented frameworks and the "real world" licensing practical-oral medical exam, which needs improvement in both evaluation and education processes.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence/legislation & jurisprudence , Competency-Based Education/legislation & jurisprudence , Competency-Based Education/organization & administration , Curriculum , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/legislation & jurisprudence , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/organization & administration , Licensure, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Germany , Humans , Prospective Studies
16.
Acad Radiol ; 24(6): 717-720, 2017 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28526512

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: Academic radiologists commonly hold multiple simultaneous roles within the landscape of physician training. This paper analyzes theoretical scenarios describing relationships between medical students, residents, and physician educators in radiology. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The scenarios presented involve medical student supervision, radiology resident recruitment, and resident termination with respect to relevant ethical, regulatory, and legal considerations. Legal precedents and the medical social contract are addressed. RESULTS: The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act defines a framework for the privacy practices of medical schools, but it does not confer individual rights. Resident physicians rarely win wrongful termination lawsuits. Physician educators are ethically bound to act in the best interest of society. CONCLUSIONS: Courts have ruled that medicine is intended to be a self-regulatory profession. Such a power requires that physicians remain accountable to the public while providing a fair learning environment for medical trainees.


Subject(s)
Employment/legislation & jurisprudence , Internship and Residency/legislation & jurisprudence , Privacy/legislation & jurisprudence , Radiology/education , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Clinical Competence , Employee Discipline/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , United States
18.
J Gen Intern Med ; 31(11): 1369-1372, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27431386

ABSTRACT

This perspectives article considers the potential implications an affirmative action ban would have on patient care in the US. A physician's race and ethnicity are among the strongest predictors of specialty choice and whether or not a physician cares for Medicaid and uninsured populations. Taking this into account, research suggests that an affirmative action ban in university admissions would sharply reduce the supply of primary care physicians to Medicaid and uninsured populations over the coming decade. Our article compares current conditions to the potential effect of an affirmative action ban by projecting how many future medical students will become primary care physicians for Medicaid and uninsured patients by 2025. Based on previous evidence and current medical student training patterns, we project that a ban could deny primary care access for 1.25 million of our nation's most vulnerable patients, considerably worsening existing healthcare disparities. More broadly, we argue that the effects of eliminating affirmative action would be fundamentally contrary to the Association of American Medical Colleges' stated goal of medical education-"to improve the health of all."


Subject(s)
Cultural Diversity , Health Personnel/trends , Health Policy/trends , Minority Groups , Education, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Education, Medical/trends , Health Personnel/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Minority Groups/legislation & jurisprudence , Physicians/legislation & jurisprudence , Physicians/trends , School Admission Criteria/trends , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , United States/ethnology
20.
GMS J Med Educ ; 33(1): Doc11, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26958648

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: In November 2015, the German Federal Parliament voted on a new legal regulation regarding assisted suicide. It was decided to amend the German Criminal Code so that any "regular, repetitive offer" (even on a non-profit basis) of assistance in suicide would now be considered a punishable offense. On July 2, 2015, a date which happened to be accompanied by great media interest in that it was the day that the first draft of said law was presented to Parliament, we surveyed 4th year medical students at the Technical University Munich on "physician-assisted suicide," "euthanasia" and "palliative sedation," based on a fictitious case vignette study. METHOD: The vignette study described two versions of a case in which a patient suffered from a nasopharyngeal carcinoma (physical suffering subjectively perceived as being unbearable vs. emotional suffering). The students were asked about the current legal norms for each respective course of action as well as their attitudes towards the ethical acceptability of these measures. RESULTS: Out of 301 students in total, 241 (80%) participated in the survey; 109 answered the version 1 questionnaire (physical suffering) and 132 answered the version 2 questionnaire (emotional suffering). The majority of students were able to assess the currently prevailing legal norms on palliative sedation (legal) and euthanasia (illegal) correctly (81.2% and 93.7%, respectively), while only a few students knew that physician-assisted suicide, at that point in time, did not constitute a criminal offense. In the case study that was presented, 83.3% of the participants considered palliative sedation and the simultaneous withholding of artificial nutrition and hydration as ethically acceptable, 51.2% considered physician-assisted suicide ethically legitimate, and 19.2% considered euthanasia ethically permissible. When comparing the results of versions 1 and 2, a significant difference could only be seen in the assessment of the legality of palliative sedation: it was considered legal more frequently in the physical suffering version (88.1% vs. 75.8%). CONCLUSION: The majority of the students surveyed wrongly assumed that physician-assisted suicide is a punishable offense in Germany. However, a narrow majority considered physician-assisted suicide ethically acceptable in the case study presented. Compared to euthanasia, more than twice as many participants considered physician-assisted suicide acceptable. There was no significant difference between personal attitudes towards palliative sedation, physician-assisted suicide or euthanasia in light of physical or emotional suffering. Educational programs in this field should be expanded both qualitatively and quantitatively, especially considering the relevance of the subject matter, the deficits within the knowledge of legal norms and the now even higher complexity of the legal situation due to the new law from December 2015.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Deep Sedation/psychology , Euthanasia/psychology , Palliative Care/psychology , Students, Medical/psychology , Suicide, Assisted/psychology , Curriculum , Deep Sedation/ethics , Ethics, Medical/education , Euthanasia/ethics , Euthanasia/legislation & jurisprudence , Germany , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms/psychology , Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms/therapy , Pain/psychology , Palliative Care/ethics , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Suicide, Assisted/ethics , Suicide, Assisted/legislation & jurisprudence , Surveys and Questionnaires
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