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ICM 1 GOALS AND OBJECTIVES

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The physician should ask of his destiny no more than this; he should be content with no less. ... Medicine is the opposite: a physician must be on time, be ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ICM 1 GOALS AND OBJECTIVES


1
ICM1 Orientation
2004-2005 Stanford Massie M.D. Course Director
2
  • No greater opportunity, responsibility, or
    obligation is given to an individual than that of
    serving as a physician. In treating the
    suffering he needs technical skill, scientific
    knowledge, and human understanding. He who uses
    these with courage, with humility, and with
    wisdom will provide a unique service for his
    fellowman, and will build an enduring edifice of
    character within himself. The physician should
    ask of his destiny no more than this he should
    be content with no less.
  • Tinsley Harrison M.D.
  • Principles of Internal Medicine

3
Medicine as a career
  • A noble endeavor
  • Responsibility
  • Trust
  • Service
  • Rewards and Obligations
  • Altruism
  • Balance of personal and professional life
  • Self improvement

4
Medicine as a career
  • Becoming a physician is a process
  • Dont tread lightly
  • Recognize your teachers and thank them
  • Teach others
  • Self-improvement
  • Be a student of medicine and people
  • Cultivate curiosity and relationships

5
ICM and your career
  • ICM marks a major step down the path
  • ICM is different
  • Life long skills
  • Foundation of your future practice
  • Practice, practice, practice
  • Be proactive
  • We want you to succeed!

6
The hardest conviction to get into the mind of a
beginner is that the education upon which he is
engaged is not a college course, not a medical
course, but a life course, for which the work of
a few years under teachers is but a preparation
Sir William Osler
7
Road Map
  • Course Objectives
  • Small Group Meetings/Learning activities
  • Examinations and Grades
  • Other course activities
  • Suggestions for Students
  • Introduction of course administration
  • Comments from fourth year students

8
ICM Course Objectives
  • Contact with patients at the very beginning of
    medical school
  • Clinical correlation with what you will study in
    basic science courses
  • Familiarity with the techniques of physical
    examination, medical interviewing and history
    taking

9
ICM Course Objectives
  • Acquisition of communication skills necessary to
    establish effective therapeutic relationships
    with patients
  • Ease with oral and written case presentation
  • Promotion of professional behavior
  • Development of skills necessary for lifelong
    self-directed learning
  • Preparation for the clinical clerkships

10
Why now? The changing face of medicine
  • Shorter lengths of stay
  • Faster pace
  • Less time for teaching
  • Less direct observation of students clinical
    skills

11
Mixed messages
  • Pre Med culture promotes a focus on grades to
    the exclusion of everything else
  • Some get the message that its ok to
  • Miss classes
  • Show up late
  • Not prepare adequately
  • As long as you make good grades
  • Clinical Medicine is the opposite a physician
    must be on time, be prepared, be engaged and
    dedicated, and internally motivated to do his/her
    best (professional excellence)

12
What should you be striving for?
  • Graduating students (and physicians) should
  • possess the following attributes
  • Altruism
  • Knowledge
  • Skill
  • Sense of duty

AAMC Medical School Objectives Project. 1998.
13
ICM1 Overview
  • 17 Small Group Meetings
  • Block I Medical Interviewing
  • Small group discussions
  • Patient contact and case presentations
  • Guided History exercise
  • Difficult interviewing issues
  • Block II Physical Examination (PE)
  • Overview of the Physical Exam
  • Demo/practice of each component of PE
  • Student teaching

14
SGMs Who?
  • Groups consist of 4-6 students
  • Preceptors come from IM, Peds, Carraway, Baptist,
    TKC and St. Vincents
  • Preceptors typically do one group solo, some may
    pair up to split a group

15
SGMs Where?
  • Your assignment of preceptor, day of the week and
    location are available on the web page
  • Your group will be assigned a specific location
    in the hospital from which to draw patients

16
SGMs When?
  • Monday through Thursday (after 3pm)
  • Some flexibility is necessary to accommodate
    preceptors busy (and unpredictable) schedules
  • Significant effort has gone into avoiding
    conflicts in other courses (tests etc.) and
    respecting the many demands on your time

17
Small Group Meeting (SGM) Policies
  • Attendance required
  • SGMs rescheduled only for extraordinary
    circumstances
  • Students expected to be on time and prepared
  • Diagnostic equipment purchased by 1/7/05
  • Professional dress expected for SGMs
  • White coat, embroidered with name
  • Neckties for male students

18
Small Group Meetings
  • Syllabus lists learning objectives for each SGM
  • Mid year evaluation opportunity to get
    preceptors view of your progress
  • At year end, preceptor will evaluate each student
    on their performance in the small group this
    will be comprise 30 of the final grade

19
ICM Grading
  • Components
  • Preceptor evaluation (30)
  • OSCEs (30)
  • Written examinations (30)
  • Professionalism Score (10)
  • Commendation letters awarded to top 10
  • SOM pass-fail quartile system

20
Preceptor Evaluation/Performance in Small Group
Meetings
  • Interest
  • Enthusiasm
  • Preparedness
  • Participation in discussions
  • Facility with oral and written presentation
  • Physical examination techniques
  • Communication skills
  • Professional behavior

21
Written Examinations
  • Both written and clinical examinations cover
  • Textbook reading assignments in Bates Cole/Bird
  • Content of lectures on the physical exam
  • Material presented in Small Group Meetings /
    teaching sessions with faculty
  • Biweekly quizzes (3 in block I, 4 in block II)
  • Taken in the computer lab anytime during the
    assigned period (48 hrs.)
  • Quizzes are cumulative in nature
  • Use of old test questions or sharing information
    about the quizzes is NOT permitted

22
OSCEs Objective Structured Clinical
Examinations
  • Simulated Patients used to present clinical
    scenarios
  • Students assessed on abilities to interview and
    examine patients and assess common clinical
    problems
  • Feedback will be given by the patient
  • Adherence to UASOM Honor Code is essential

23
Professionalism Score
  • All students start with 100 points.
  • Any unprofessional behavior may lead to
    deductions from the total
  • at discretion of course director
  • will be based on input from preceptors, staff,
    fellow students or SPs
  • Final decision will be reviewed by the faculty
    members of the course Steering Committee
  • This score will comprise 10 of final grade
  • We fully expect all students to finish with 100
    points!

24
ICM - Other Learning Activities
  • Lectures
  • given prior to PE demo sessions
  • intended to introduce the concepts of exam
  • Unscheduled time / off weeks
  • ICM time is generally 3-5 pm each day of the week
    (with occasional exceptions)
  • This time should be used for practicing skills
    learned

25
Community Elder Experience
  • Expose students to community dwelling elders,
    thus encouraging a broad perspective on care of
    the elderly
  • Introduce some of the principles and challenges
    involved in care of the elderly
  • Provide an opportunity to develop a longitudinal
    relationship with a patient

26
Community Elder Experience
  • 2 ICM1 students will be paired with a community
    dwelling elder volunteer
  • Four meetings during the course of the year,
    arranged by students and volunteer at mutually
    agreeable time/location (preferably volunteers
    home)
  • Activities will parallel SGM content
  • Preceptors will only be peripherally involved

27
Other course activities
  • History taking practice sessions (HTP)
  • Physical exam practice sessions (PEP)
  • Designed to
  • Augment experiences in the SGMs
  • Allow opportunity for practice and feedback

28
ICM Learning Resources
  • Web page
  • Bates Guide to Physical Examination History
    Taking (8th edition)
  • Cole/BirdThe Medical Interview A Three Function
    Approach (2nd edition)
  • Patients simulated and real
  • LRC Media CD-ROM, Bates videotapes
  • Preceptors

29
ICM - Communication
  • Communication/notification
  • Announcements on UASOM website
  • E-mail
  • Individual phone calls
  • Course evaluation
  • Course evaluation must be turned in by student
    before grade will be released
  • ICM Steering Committee
  • Course Representatives

30
ICM - Suggestions for Students
  • Be prepared
  • read pertinent assignments, think ahead about
    discussions
  • review learning objectives for session
  • ask questions!
  • Establish relationship with preceptors
  • Encourage preceptors to round on wards
  • Practice techniques you learn
  • Use all resources available to you

31
ICM - Suggestions for Students
  • You get out of ICM what you put into it.

32
Contacts/Questions
  • If you have questions or need help, contact
  • Course Director Stanford Massie, M.D.
    (934-4473, smassie_at_uab.edu)
  • Assistant Course Director Analia Castiglioni
    M.D., MPH (934-4473, acastigl_at_uab.edu)
  • Program Director Pat Norton Ed.D (975-6315,
    pnorton_at_uab.edu)
  • Program Associate Ann Lee (934-4473,
    annlee_at_uab.edu)
  • Office hours for Dr. Massie will be Fridays from
    1-330 pm check with ICM office to confirm

33
This, as I see it, is the vocation to
which you have been called. Understand what it
is, and what it requires from you with gleaming
clarity. Discipline yourself to accept and meet
the burdensome demands that it will continuously
make upon you. From now on, you are engaged in
the service of the sick. With the knowledge you
are acquiring as a scientist, with your clinical
art developed through experience, with the warmth
of your own spirit and the strength of your own
character, with the laying on of your hands, and
in response to your words, you can make the sick
better, and fill the dying with peace. These are
great powers. Always deserve them.
Adapted from Tumulty, P. NEJM.
1970283(1)20-24. Opening lecture to 3rd year
students in their ICM course. Johns Hopkins
University.
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