Implementation of Competency-Based Medical Education in a Canadian Medical Oncology Training Program: a First Year Retrospective Review

被引:10
|
作者
Tomiak, Anna [1 ]
Linford, Geordie [1 ]
McDonald, Micheline [1 ]
Willms, Jane [1 ]
Hammad, Nazik [1 ]
机构
[1] Queens Univ, Dept Oncol, 25 King St West, Kingston, ON K7L 5P9, Canada
关键词
Competency-based; CBME; Implementation; Postgraduate;
D O I
10.1007/s13187-020-01895-y
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
As part of a university-wide initiative, competency-based medical education (CBME) was implemented in the Medical Oncology training program at Queen's University in July 2017. Stages, entrustable professional activities (EPAs), and required training experiences established by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC) national subspecialty committee were adopted. Entrada (Elentra), the electronic portfolio developed at Queen's University, was used for assessment collection. Between July 2017 and December 2018, participating faculty members completed 157 assessments. Eighty-nine percent were EPA assessments with a median of 16 assessments per faculty member (range 1-40). Ninety-five percent of assessments included written "Comments" or "Next steps" with 56% of all assessments including specific or actionable feedback. Discussions between the program director, residents, program administrator, CBME education consultant, and CBME lead led to the identification of 9 lessons learned during implementation. These centered on (1) faculty and resident development and engagement; (2) sharing the work of CBME; (3) collaboration and communication; (4) global assessment; (5) assessment plan challenges; (6) burden of CBME; (7) limitations of e-portfolio; (8) importance of early tracking of resident progress; and (9) culture change. This article describes the experience of the authors and considers strategies that may be helpful to programs implementing CBME in their teaching and learning environment.
引用
收藏
页码:852 / 856
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Trust as a Scaffold for Competency-Based Medical Education
    Young, Eric
    Elnicki, D. Michael
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2019, 34 (05) : 647 - 648
  • [42] Transforming remediation for competency-based medical education
    Klig, Jean E.
    Chou, Calvin L.
    Kalet, Adina L.
    MEDICAL TEACHER, 2024,
  • [43] Towards Competency-Based Medical Education in Neurostimulation
    Danilewitz, Marlon
    Ainsworth, Nicholas James
    Liu, Cindy
    Vila-Rodriguez, Fidel
    ACADEMIC PSYCHIATRY, 2020, 44 (06) : 775 - 778
  • [44] Trust as a Scaffold for Competency-Based Medical Education
    Eric Young
    D. Michael Elnicki
    Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2019, 34 : 647 - 648
  • [45] Learner Phenotypes in Competency-Based Medical Education
    Brett Mador
    Vijay J. Daniels
    Anna Oswald
    Simon R. Turner
    Medical Science Educator, 2021, 31 : 2061 - 2064
  • [46] Growth mindset in competency-based medical education
    Richardson, Denyse
    Kinnear, Benjamin
    Hauer, Karen E.
    Turner, Teri L.
    Warm, Eric J.
    Hall, Andrew K.
    Ross, Shelley
    Thoma, Brent
    Van Melle, Elaine
    MEDICAL TEACHER, 2021, 43 (07) : 751 - 757
  • [47] Competency-based Medical Education: The Next Steps
    Walsh, Kieran
    INDIAN PEDIATRICS, 2015, 52 (10) : 905 - 905
  • [48] Competency-based medical education: the discourse of infallibility
    Boyd, Victoria A.
    Whitehead, Cynthia R.
    Thille, Patricia
    Ginsburg, Shiphra
    Brydges, Ryan
    Kuper, Ayelet
    MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2018, 52 (01) : 45 - 57
  • [49] Realizing the Promise of Competency-Based Medical Education
    Holmboe, Eric S.
    ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2015, 90 (04) : 411 - 413
  • [50] Competency-Based Medical Education: The Wave of the Future
    Caccia, Nicolette
    Nakajima, Amy
    Kent, Nancy
    JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY CANADA, 2015, 37 (04) : 349 - 353