Tag Archives: education

Faculty Development and the Family Medicine Milestones: What Do They Have to Do With Each Other?

Joseph Brocato, PhD

Joseph Brocato, PhD

If you are like me, I am sure that many of you are vacillating between denial and avoidance—and perhaps even outright hostility—when contemplating the new ACGME Family Medicine RRC Milestones and Next Accreditation System (see http://www.acgme-nas.org/family-medicine.html). While indeed they involve a new way of tracking residents’ attainment of fundamental knowledge, skills, and attitudes, it also suggests that we as faculty need to make efforts to examine how much we know about evaluating our residents in this new era of competency-based education. What are some of the faculty skills we need to hone?
While there are the traditional academic roles of teaching, research, and scholarship and embedded skills within each, we now find ourselves needing to become much more proficient in the area of evaluation: how do we do a thorough evaluation of our trainees, and how do we take a potentially large bolus of evaluation data points for each resident/fellow and make a objective decision about residents/fellows reaching the sometimes seemingly elusive marker of being “competent to practice independently”?

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Returning From Maternity Leave to Academic Family Medicine

WomenInFMThis is second in a work/life balance series written by members of the STFM Group on Women in Family Medicine.

Two weeks before return to work:

Elizabeth J. Brown MD, MPH

Elizabeth Brown MD, MPH

The house is a mess, laundry from a week ago still isn’t put away, and I haven’t showered in 3 days. As I nurse my son while helping my daughter on the potty, I wonder how we will manage when I go back to work. Will laundry ever get done? Will we eat something other than waffles and eggs for supper?

As I plan my re-entry after child number two, I feel torn. I love being home with my kids, but I enjoy my job as well. Could I really be a full-time, stay at home mom? Some days I think yes, but then I know I would miss teaching medical students, caring for patients, and delivering babies, and I don’t think it would be right for me.

When I came back to work after my daughter was born, I went home and nursed her during lunch in the beginning, and I think it helped me readjust. This time I can’t do that. Our childcare is too far away. I hope my son will take a bottle and sleep.

I’m hesitant about our childcare situation. Will both children thrive? Feel loved? I know I can’t micromanage the small stuff, and our provider does things differently.

Two weeks post return to work:

Well, I am back. Continue reading

Experiencing Primary Care From Opposite Sides of the Spectrum: Clerkships Can Influence the Career Path of Medical Students

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Danial Jilani, MPH

The uncertainty surrounding primary care is arguably the highest it has ever been. Many medical students entering their third-year clerkships have preformed conclusions about primary care. At the face of a federal health care overhaul, declining reimbursements, and a workforce shortage estimated to reach 21,000 by 2015, for some medical students the future of primary care seems unpredictable. A third-year experience in family medicine and ambulatory medicine can be an imperative influence in the career path of a medical student.

Third-year students at Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine (WSU-BSOM) complete a 6-week family medicine rotation where they spend time with preceptors in a variety of settings, including private offices, indigent clinics, academic settings, and more. During my clerkship, I had the honor of working with Dr Joseph Allen, a recipient of the AAFP Foundation’s 2012 Pfizer Teacher Development award.

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