Showing posts with label ACGME. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ACGME. Show all posts

Sunday, July 20, 2014

GME Funding

A recent post from the NY Times discusses the issue of the physician workforce of the future.  I believe it accurately describes some of the concerns about GME training.  Yes, GME training is indeed the bottleneck by which new physicians come into the workforce.  Yes, we need new physicians (and other health care professionals) to care for an aging population.  We especially need primary care physicians for this, but we also need general surgeons, many types of subspecialists, and we need physicians to go into underserved areas, particularly rural areas.

There are bills that, if passed, could help fund more GME slots.  Dr. Atul Grover from the AAMCdescribes them well here in this post.  Residency programs accredited by the ACGME take new graduates from medical school, and appropriately train them to go out and practice medicine independently.  I also personally disagree with a proposal from Missouri that advocates for "assistantphysicians".  Simply put, these graduates need adequate training (a minimum of 3-4 years for most residency programs, with some like neurosurgery taking as long as 7-8 years), and that is what GME provides.


Please advocate for future GME funding: it is the best way to begin to create a physician workforce that will help care for our society.

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Graduate Medical Education: Successes Despite Challenges



In a post a few days ago, Dr. J Russell Strader, in a post entitled “Why graduate medical education is failing”, described concern over graduates of residency in the current era, compared with those who trained in a different era.  He opines that many current residents feel, in his words, “woefully unprepared” for the realities of practice and have a “lack of ability to work independently”.  While his specialty of cardiology, a mix of a “procedural specialty” and a “cognitive specialty”, is slightly different from mine (primarily cognitive), I have a few thoughts about graduate medical education (GME) that paint a different picture.

 The current residents in training now did not “ask” for the duty hour restrictions.  The duty hour restrictions were placed on them, not the other way around.  Program directors themselves are in a quandary to produce competent graduates while still adhering to restrictions with which they may or may not agree.   For example, what should I do when a resident chooses of her own volition to stay over on duty hours by 25 minutes to finish discussing end-of-life concerns with a family of an ill intensive care unit patient?  I personally applaud such residents for understanding the bigger picture (for the record, a scenario such as this IS allowed by the current duty hour regulations).

Current program directors have to make the following statement on every one of their graduates and "sign off" on each resident at the time of graduation: “This graduate is competent to practice [SPECIALTY] independently without supervision.”  The current era of competency-based medical education, administrated through the Milestones initiative will likely demonstrate that some residents need longer training times while others will prove appropriate competency earlier.  The focus, of course, is to produce physicians who truly are ready to practice unsupervised, as the ACGME is accountable to the public.

The current generation of residents seem to describe a greater interest in caring for the underserved and global health initiatives than previous generations (this is purely anectodal based on applicants I have interviewed over the past 10 years).  This may be multifactorial, due to factors such as newer curricular opportunities in these areas that may not have existed many years ago.

The current residency and fellowship training programs still place great emphasis on “thinking like a doctor” and other clinical decision-making curricula, and have many novel curricular tools to evaluate residents in this regard.  

So what might we take from all of this?

First, I believe that the current generation of trainees is as dedicated as any other to the provision of outstanding patient care.  This generation has many competing demands and barriers to that care that simply did not exist 10 or more years ago, and they are handling it as best as they can.  They are not lazy!

Second, the concept of supervision, which has always existed, has nevertheless evolved over the years, necessitating more oversight by current attendings.  Attitudes such as “If I had to call the attending for help, it was a failure” might now be (and should be) a minority opinion, as the field of patient safety now demands more intensive supervision from attending physicians.

Third, the ACGME has moved towards a concept of “graded supervision”, meaning PGY1 residents should have more oversight than those 3 months from graduation.  The amount of supervision diminishes as time progresses through the training program.  This is different from the mentality of “let’s crush them during intern year so that they are REALLY ready as upper level residents” which was likely the pervasive mentality.  Of course a consequence of this may lead to some residents taking longer to feel comfortable as a supervisory PGY2 resident.

Fourth, the concept of life-long learning means that someone does not know “everything” once she/he begins practice.  It is, after all, the “practice” of medicine, and we all are always learning (even many years after training is completed).  This concept of lifelong learning can even be taught.  There is nothing wrong with newly minted clinicians thinking: “Can I run this patient care scenario past you?  In fact, it is probably safer for patients to have another opinion when one clinician is doubtful as to diagnostic or therapeutic plans.  This is best described as “knowing when you don’t know something”.  The danger of course lies in the physician who “doesn’t know what she/he doesn’t know.”

My colleague Teresa Chan also outlined her thoughts on this same post earlier today, and provides a truly compelling argument why graduate medical education is succeeding in producing competent physicians ready to practice independently and unsupervised.  Like Dr. Chan, I am very proud of the “products” of the current GME environment, and feel that patient care has improved over the years as the graduate medical education community has evolved in not only what it teaches to residents but also how it teaches.

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Medical School Graduation: The "Calling"

Today was graduation for the Indiana University School of Medicine (IUSM).  It was a privilege being a part of this special day for the graduates; I was honored to be a recipient of a Trustee Teaching Award, and so I was able to sit on the stage for the ceremony and watch all of the graduates receive the hood, as well as congratulations from the Deans.  What an awesome spectacle!  Over 300 IUSM medical students became physicians, and their names now all end with “MD”.  Very cool!
I wonder what others think about graduation ceremonies.  It is a long day for all; the room is packed with people (there were over 3000 at the Sagamore Ballroom at the Convention Center in downtown Indianapolis). Parents, grandparents, spouses, significant others, friends, children and others were able to witness this special day for the graduates.  I saw the pride in so many faces.  Eight of them will be joining me as part of the IUSM Med-Peds Residency Program (sorry, my pics didn’t turn out so great; you all walk too fast!).
One student who would have graduated today passed away earlier this year.  His wife spoke to those in attendance after an honorary posthumous degree was granted.  There was not a dry eye in the room, including my own.
This year our amazing Dean, Dr. D. Craig Brater, is retiring after over 25 years of service to the IUSM. He will certainly be missed, and has been the face of IUSM, leading us with honesty, integrity, and humility for 13 years.
In addition, graduation today included a keynote speaker, Dr. Tom Nasca, the CEO of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, which is responsible for graduate medical education in the United States.  It was an honor to meet him before the ceremony.  Dr. Nasca is probably one of the busiest physicians in the United States now, overseeing the accreditation of all of the training programs of residents and fellows.  He is an internationally known medical educator.  We were blessed to have him be part of the ceremony.


In his address today, he showed no slides about duty hours.  He did not mention Milestones or competencies.  Rather, he focused on the “why” of going into medicine, as a “calling”.  He told a story about a dialysis patient who had an incredible impact on him when he was in nephrology training.  He reiterated why many of us choose medicine as a profession: to care for others, and delved into the impact that a patient can have that teaches us as physicians or physicians-in-training.  This was inspiring, and helped me to reflect and understand why I do what I do: to help patients, to train the doctors of the future, and to help educate students, residents and faculty in some small way. 
To all the medical students graduating and becoming physicians over the next few weeks: kudos to you for all of your hard work.  The journey is not yet over, and the learning is really just beginning!  Be proud of your amazing accomplishments, but more importantly, embrace what lies ahead.  The opportunities to do good in the world, and care for others, are now coming to fruition.  Congratulations to the class of 2013!

P.S. If you were wondering, yes I did tweet parts of the graduation.  Check out the hashtag #IUSMGraduation for tweets and pics.