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EURACT EDUCATIONAL AGENDA FOR GENERAL PRACTICE

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Title: EURACT EDUCATIONAL AGENDA FOR GENERAL PRACTICE


1
EURACT EDUCATIONAL AGENDA FOR GENERAL PRACTICE
2
OVERVIEW OF PRESENTATION
  • Background of the agenda development
  • The process of its development
  • The agenda itself
  • Consequences

3
BACKGROUNDEUROPEAN HARMONISATION
  • Academic context
  • Bologna 1999 creation of European Higher
    Education Area 2010
  • European Credit Transfer system 1988
  • Professional context
  • Free movement of doctors 1993
  • Title III or title IV

Harmonisation finding points of convergence and
common understanding and defining a set of
competencies desired learning outcomes 
4
PROCESSDEFINING THE DISCIPLINE
  • European definition of general practice
  • Adopted in London 2002
  • At least two years of work towards reaching a
    consensus
  • A basis for research, quality and educational
    agendas

5
OVERVIEW OF THE DEFINITION
  • 6 Core Competencies
  • 1. Primary Care Management
  • 2. Person Centred Care
  • 3.Specific Problem Solving
  • 4. Comprehensive approach
  • 5.Community Orientation
  • 6. Holistic Modelling
  • 11 Characteristics
  • a. First contact / all health problems
  • b. Care co-ordinator advocacy
  • c. Person centred approach
  • d. Doctor-patient relationship
  • e. Longitudinal continuity
  • f. Decision making f.o prevalence
  • g. Acute Chronic management
  • h. Early undifferentiated stages
  • i. Health Wellbeing
  • j. Health in the community
  • k. Bio-Psycho-Social culture and existential

6
PROCESSDEFINING AIMS AND SCOPE OF THE AGENDA
  • Focus on the 6 competencies, specific for GP/FM
  • 1. Primary Care Management
  • 2. Person Centred Care
  • 3. Specific Problem Solving
  • 4. Comprehensive approach
  • 5. Community Orientation
  • 6. Holistic Modelling
  • Focus on learning outcomes
  • Lead to European recommendations
  • A 2 years process, involving all EURACT council
    members

7
THEORY
17 ICPC chapters 6 components All
patients at all age groups From Health
promotion, prevention, cure care,
to palliation
Performance DOES Competence SHOWS
HOW Skills KNOWS HOW Knowledge KNOWS
Contextual basis Attitudinal basis Scientific
basis
8
PRACTICE
  • You encounter a 75-year old elderly man who has
    not been in practice for more than two years.
    During the last visit, his blood pressure was
    190/100 mm Hg.
  • Today he is complaining abou headache. He says
    that he has lost some weight. He is also
    coughing. His blood pressure today is 190/110 mm
    Hg. He is dirty.

9
THE AGENDAELEMENTS
  • Intoduction to the agenda
  • 6 chapters with the same structure
  • Educational aims
  • Consequences to teaching methods
  • Consequences for assessment
  • Consequences to setting and timeframe
  • Literature

10
PRIMARY CARE MANAGEMENT
  • Objectives
  • Primary care epidemiology
  • Management of unselected problems
  • Organization of primary care clinic

11
COMPETENCES 1
  • Epidemiology of resopiratory illnesses in your
    practice
  • Reasons for weight loss in general practice?
  • Reasons for headache?
  • Potential diagnoses in primary care?
  • Epidemiology of respiratory diseases in your
    practice?

12
METHODS 1
  • With a teacher, who is an excellent practitioners
  • During GP attachment
  • Assessment of performance in practice

13
PATIENT CENTEREDNESS
  • Objectives
  • Always as a  person  in  context 
  • continuity personal / episodic / discipline
  • Also the doctor as a person in his/her context

14
COMPETENCES 2
  • Establishing a patients agenda
  • Negotiating his needs and wants
  • Reason for encounter
  • Ensuring continuity for this episode/disease/docto
    r
  • Managing negative emotions and maintaining
    professionalism

15
METHODS 2
  • A place for narratives and patient stories
  • Negotiation training
  • Assessment
  • Direct observation
  • Indirect methods

16
SPECIFIC PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS
  • Objectives
  • Hypothetico deductive / Learning scripts
  • Use of time
  • Incremental investigation,
  • Coping with uncertainty
  • Communicate on strategies

17
COMPETENCES 3
  • Diagnostic procedure
  • Reaching diagnosis
  • Stepwise approach
  • Reasons for referral
  • Communicating diagnosis
  • Communicating risk factors
  • Negotiating disease management strategy

18
METHODS 3
  • Role modelling
  • Case reflection and supervision
  • Simulation and case discussions
  • Assessment
  • Checklists
  • Case - based orals

19
COMPETENCE 4 Comprehensive Approach
  • Objectives
  • Multiple complaints and co-morbidity
  • Aim on health promotion and well being

20
COMPETENCES 4
  • Prioritising health problems
  • Needs and wants
  • Health promotion in an elderly patient

21
METHODS 4
  • Assignements in healthcare settings
  • Case descriptions and small group discussions
  • Assessment
  • Patient should be the starting point
  • Individual consultation review

22
COMMUNITY ORIENTATION
  • Objectives
  • Understand health needs of the communities
  • Understand impact of poverty, ethnicity,
    inequality
  • Reconcile health needs of individual with
    community

23
COMPETENCES 5
  • Involving family in the management of the
    condition
  • Arranging for financial benefits?
  • Managing communicable diseases in a community
    setting
  • Ethical impications ?

24
METHODS
  • Structured reflection on work-based experience
  • Conventional classroom methods
  • Practice audit / practice studies
  • Assessment
  • Report / discussion with work based teacher

25
HOLISTIC MODELLING
  • Objectives
  • Whole person in the context of values, beliefs,
    culture
  • Biopsychosocial model as the basis for cure and
    care
  • From holistic understanding into practical
    measures

26
COMPETENCES 6
  • Developing management strategy
  • Medicines
  • Psychological and emotional support
  • Social support
  • Family interventions

27
METHODS
  • Patient-case studies
  • Single case descriptions
  • Video analysis of clinical encounters
  • Assessment
  • Written reports, essays on specific aspects

28
SUMMARY METHODS
  • Work in practice should be a cornerstone of
    learning experiential
  • Observation of others, or by others
  • Indirect (video, notes review) or direct (sitting
    in)
  • Records review random case analysis, audits
  • Population based health needs assessments
  • Learning in small groups peers,
    multiprofessional
  • Planned patient encounters for specific
    conditions, technical practice, balanced caseload
  • Tutorials
  • Reflection

29
SUMMARY ASSESSMENT
  • The patient should be the starting point in
    assessment
  • Patient feedback
  • Staff feedback
  • Tutor feedback
  • Learner self assessment
  • Written evidence of performance (from practice or
    under exam conditions)
  • Assessment of performance (from practice or under
    exam conditions)
  • Prepared work portfolio, project, papers,
    dissertation
  • Reflective log

30
SUMMARY TIMEFRAME
  • basic medical education the student should know
    the theoretical background and application in
    simple cases.
  • vocational training the doctor should be
    competent
  • continuous professional development the doctor
    should demonstrate adequate performance in this
    area.

31
Consequences
  • An on-going process
  • Distribuition
  • To universities and teaching organisations
  • To curriculum responsibles
  • To policy makers
  • To WONCA network organisations
  • Adaptation in local situations
  • Curriculum development at various levels
  • Discussions with policymakers
  • Other
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