417 results match your criteria: "Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons[Affiliation]"

Postgraduate medical education is an essential societal enterprise that prepares highly skilled physicians for the health workforce. In recent years, PGME systems have been criticized worldwide for problems with variable graduate abilities, concerns about patient safety, and issues with teaching and assessment methods. In response, competency based medical education approaches, with an emphasis on graduate outcomes, have been proposed as the direction for 21st century health profession education.

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  • Observational studies are essential for understanding health inequities, but it's unclear how well they report equity-related factors in their design and analysis.
  • The authors reviewed 16,828 articles from 2020 to 2022, selecting 320 studies to analyze their focus on populations facing inequities and data collection methods.
  • Findings showed that while many studies acknowledged health equity, only a small percentage effectively reported key design aspects related to equity, indicating a significant gap in the methodology of health equity research.
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Health inequities and marginalized groups: An overview for college student travelers and travel health professionals.

J Am Coll Health

March 2024

Department of Family and Preventive Medicine and Student Health Services, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.

One of the main goals of college- and university-sponsored travel is to broaden the global perspectives of student travelers, thereby enhancing their ability to effectively communicate and work with people from different cultural backgrounds. Pre-travel consultations are important for all students traveling internationally, and especially for those facing current or past health inequities and marginalization. To offer high quality, inclusive services, college travel health clinicians must understand both the student traveler population and cultural norms at the travel destinations, especially those related to health and safety.

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Objective: Approximately five years ago, the Royal College emergency medicine programs in Canada implemented a competency-based paradigm and introduced the use of Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs) for assessment of units of professional activity to assess trainees. Many competency-based medical education (CBME) based curricula, involve assessing for entrustment through observations of EPAs. While EPAs are frequently assessed in clinical settings, simulation is also used.

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Competency-Based Medical Education at Scale: A Road Map for Transforming National Systems of Postgraduate Medical Education.

Perspect Med Educ

February 2024

Department of Emergency Medicine, and Director, Centre for Innovation in Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

In the past decade, the Canadian system of postgraduate medical education has been transformed with the implementation of a new approach to competency based medical education called Competence by Design. The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (Royal College) developed an approach to time-variable competency based medical education and adapted that design for medical, surgical, and diagnostic disciplines. New educational standards and entrustable professional activities consistent with this approach were co-created with 67 specialties and subspecialties, and implementation was scaled up across 17 universities and over 1000 postgraduate training programs.

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  • The study examines researcher motivations for conducting equity-related health research during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • A sample of 320 studies was reviewed, revealing key motivations such as addressing health disparities, improving access through social determinants, and filling knowledge gaps.
  • By understanding these motivations, the findings aim to inform the development of tailored guidance to support researchers focused on health equity.
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Introduction: Teaching point-of-care ultrasonography (PoCUS) to medical students is resource intensive. Peer-assisted learning, where the teacher can be a medical student, may be a feasible alternative to expert-led learning. The objective of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to compare the PoCUS performance assessments of medical students receiving peer-assisted vs expert-led learning.

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Competency based medical education is being adopted around the world. Accreditation plays a vital role as an enabler in the adoption and implementation of competency based medical education, but little has been published about how the design of an accreditation system facilitates this transformation. The Canadian postgraduate medical education environment has recently transitioned to an outcomes-based accreditation system in parallel with the adoption of competency based medical education.

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Competency based medical education is developed utilizing a program of assessment that ideally supports learners to reflect on their knowledge and skills, allows them to exercise a growth mindset that prepares them for coaching and eventual lifelong learning, and can support important progression and certification decisions. Examinations can serve as an important anchor to that program of assessment, particularly when considering their strength as an independent, third-party assessment with evidence that they can predict future physician performance and patient outcomes. This paper describes the aims of the ("the Royal College") certification examinations, their future role, and how they relate to the Competence by Design model, particularly as the culture of workplace assessment and the evidence for validity evolves.

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Transformative changes in health professions education need to incorporate effective faculty development, but few very large-scale faculty development designs have been described. The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada's Competence by Design project was launched to transform the delivery of postgraduate medical education in Canada using a competency-based model. In this paper we outline the goals, principles, and rationale of the Royal College's national strategy for faculty and resident development initiatives to support the implementation of Competence by Design.

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Program evaluation is an essential, but often neglected, activity in any transformational educational change. Competence by Design was a large-scale change initiative to implement a competency-based time-variable educational system in Canadian postgraduate medical education. A program evaluation strategy was an integral part of the build and implementation plan for CBD from the beginning, providing insights into implementation progress, challenges, unexpected outcomes, and impact.

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  • - Competence committees (CCs) are a new approach in health professions education aimed at enhancing assessment decision-making by allowing trained educators to review learners' progress via structured portfolios.
  • - The implementation of CCs on a national scale is complicated due to necessary cultural shifts, logistical challenges, and the diverse skills required for success, as demonstrated by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada's experiences.
  • - A successful CC implementation requires balancing standardization with flexibility to meet individual program needs, using multiple engagement strategies for local adaptation, and planning for ongoing evaluation from the start.
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Traditional approaches to assessment in health professions education systems, which have generally focused on the summative function of assessment through the development and episodic use of individual high-stakes examinations, may no longer be appropriate in an era of competency based medical education. Contemporary assessment programs should not only ensure collection of high-quality performance data to support robust decision-making on learners' achievement and competence development but also facilitate the provision of meaningful feedback to learners to support reflective practice and performance improvement. Programmatic assessment is a specific approach to designing assessment systems through the intentional selection and combination of a variety of assessment methods and activities embedded within an educational framework to simultaneously optimize the decision-making and learning function of assessment.

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Coaching is an increasingly popular means to provide individualized, learner-centered, developmental guidance to trainees in competency based medical education (CBME) curricula. Aligned with CBME's core components, coaching can assist in leveraging the full potential of this educational approach. With its focus on growth and improvement, coaching helps trainees develop clinical acumen and self-regulated learning skills.

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Introduction: Telemedicine (TM) and teleconsultation services flourished during coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) transmission to avoid COVID-19 infection and physical contact. Many physicians switched to the virtual treatment mode and nearly all types of health disciplines were covered. Through this systematic review, the authors tried to explore the strengths and weaknesses of TM, identify the barriers to adopting TM by population, and explain the limitations of this healthcare delivery model.

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The Impact of Just-in-Time Simulation Training for Healthcare Professionals on Learning and Performance Outcomes: A Systematic Review.

Simul Healthc

January 2024

From the Department of Emergency Medicine (C.P., A.P.), University of Calgary Cumming School of Medicine, Calgary, Canada; Department of Emergency Medicine (E.B.), Queen's University, Kingston, Canada ; Department of Emergency Medicine (L.L., A.K.H.), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada; Department of Pediatric Emergency Medicine (I.A.), Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH; Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (A.K.H.), Ottawa, Canada ; Libraries and Cultural Resources (H.G.), University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada.

Although just-in-time training (JIT) is increasingly used in simulation-based health professions education, its impact on learning, performance, and patient outcomes remains uncertain. The aim of this study was to determine whether JIT simulation training leads to improved learning and performance outcomes. We included randomized or nonrandomized interventional studies assessing the impact of JIT simulation training (training conducted in temporal or spatial proximity to performance) on learning outcomes among health professionals (trainees or practitioners).

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Incivility and inappropriate behaviour in the workplace are topics of growing interest due to their impact on patient care and safety. Several surveys and campaigns have emerged highlighting the existence of a problem. However, the true scale is difficult to ascertain.

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  • The Extrapyramidal Symptom Rating Scale - Abbreviated (ESRS-A) is a streamlined tool for assessing drug-induced movement disorders, focusing on conditions like parkinsonism and tardive dyskinesia.
  • Research shows that both the ESRS and ESRS-A have high inter-rater reliability and good concurrent validity when compared to other established scales, meaning different raters get consistent results.
  • These tools are important for clinical research and practice, helping to identify and measure the severity of movement disorders caused by medications, especially antipsychotics.
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Teaching Chest Tube Insertion by Blended Learning: A Multi-Dimensional Analysis.

Surg Innov

February 2024

Steinberg Centre for Simulation and Interactive Learning, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Background: Emerging technologies are being incorporated in surgical education. The use of such technology should be supported by evidence that the technology neither distracts nor overloads the learner and is easy to use. To teach chest tube insertion, we developed an e-learning module, as part of a blended learning program delivered prior to in-person hands-on simulation.

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Protocol for a living evidence synthesis on variants of concern and COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness.

Vaccine

October 2023

Knowledge Synthesis and Application Unit, School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Electronic address:

Background: It is evident that COVID-19 will remain a public health concern in the coming years, largely driven by variants of concern (VOC). It is critical to continuously monitor vaccine effectiveness as new variants emerge and new vaccines and/or boosters are developed. Systematic surveillance of the scientific evidence base is necessary to inform public health action and identify key uncertainties.

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Background: Involving collaborators and partners in research may increase relevance and uptake, while reducing health and social inequities. Collaborators and partners include people and groups interested in health research: health care providers, patients and caregivers, payers of health research, payers of health services, publishers, policymakers, researchers, product makers, program managers, and the public. Evidence syntheses inform decisions about health care services, treatments, and practice, which ultimately affect health outcomes.

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  • FOAMed is a movement that shares free medical education online to help people learn about medicine without any restrictions.!
  • A research team interviewed 11 creators from major FOAM websites to understand how these creators work and what motivates them.!
  • The creators were found to fit into three types: rebels who avoid traditional methods, professors who combine teaching with FOAM, and entrepreneurs who want to make a profit while doing what they love.!
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Background: Transition from residency to unsupervised practice represents a critical stage in learning and professional identity formation, yet there is a paucity of literature to inform residency curricula and emergency department transition programming for new faculty.

Objective: The objective of this study was to develop consensus-based recommendations to optimize the transition to practice phase of emergency medicine training.

Methods: A literature review and results of a survey of emergency medicine (EM) residency program directors informed focus groups of recent (within 5 years) EM graduates.

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