Global "systemness" in medical education: A rationale and framework to assess performance.

IF 3.3 2区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Medical Teacher Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-07 DOI:10.1080/0142159X.2023.2244665
Sawsan Abdel-Razig, James K Stoller
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Abstract

Healthcare is global. The challenges of the "triple aim" - achieving high-quality healthcare, maximal value, and an excellent patient experience and outcomes - are universal. Medical education is similarly global with worldwide efforts towards competency-based reform, the adoption and adaptation of accreditation standards, and the expansion of international collaborations between healthcare organizations (HCOs). The focus of many of these efforts centers around recognizing education as a talent pipeline to serve local and global healthcare needs. Accordingly, many U.S.-based academic medical centres are pursuing an increasingly global footprint by developing international partnerships between HCOs. The educational leadership at the Cleveland Clinic (an HCO that has ventured internationally in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United Arab Emirates) has adopted a "systemness" approach to medical education collaboratives. Systemness describes the ability of academic health systems to leverage existing structures, expertise, and other resources to address broadly shared educational needs across geographies, disseminate best practices, and ultimately improve the care that is delivered. The rationale for systemness, a concept derived from the healthcare administration and business world, affords the opportunity to achieve educational outcomes through synergy that exceeds the capability of any single component of a system. In this perspective, we posit a "systemness" taxonomy to be used to assess the performance and success of international collaborations in medical education and provide examples of its application to existing international partnerships in medical education. This framework is grounded in developmental assessment approaches, akin to those used in assessing learner performance, and defines levels of educational collaboration proficiencies, ultimately towards the alignment of these efforts with the health needs of the communities they serve. As global medical education collaboratives advance, ongoing assessment of existing partnerships and further research will be needed to define competencies and integrative activities that define high-performing medical education partnerships.

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医学教育的全球 "系统性":评估绩效的原理和框架。
医疗保健是全球性的。实现优质医疗服务、最大价值以及卓越的患者体验和疗效这 "三重目标 "所面临的挑战是全球性的。医学教育也同样是全球性的,全世界都在努力进行基于能力的改革,采用和调整评审标准,扩大医疗机构之间的国际合作。其中许多工作的重点都围绕着承认教育是服务于本地和全球医疗需求的人才输送管道。因此,许多总部设在美国的学术医疗中心正在通过发展医疗保健机构之间的国际合作关系,寻求日益全球化的足迹。克利夫兰诊所(已在加拿大、英国和阿拉伯联合酋长国开展国际业务的高等医疗机构)的教育领导层采用了 "系统性 "医学教育合作方法。系统性是指学术医疗系统利用现有结构、专业知识和其他资源来满足跨地域的广泛共同教育需求、推广最佳实践并最终改善医疗服务的能力。系统性的基本原理源于医疗保健管理和商业领域,它提供了通过协同作用实现教育成果的机会,这种协同作用超出了系统中任何单一组成部分的能力。从这个角度出发,我们提出了一个 "系统性 "分类法,用于评估医学教育国际合作的绩效和成功与否,并举例说明其在现有医学教育国际合作中的应用。该框架以发展性评估方法为基础,类似于评估学习者成绩的方法,并定义了教育合作能力的等级,最终使这些努力与所服务社区的健康需求相一致。随着全球医学教育合作的推进,需要对现有合作关系进行持续评估,并开展进一步研究,以确定界定高绩效医学教育合作关系的能力和综合活动。
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来源期刊
Medical Teacher
Medical Teacher 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
8.50%
发文量
396
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical Teacher provides accounts of new teaching methods, guidance on structuring courses and assessing achievement, and serves as a forum for communication between medical teachers and those involved in general education. In particular, the journal recognizes the problems teachers have in keeping up-to-date with the developments in educational methods that lead to more effective teaching and learning at a time when the content of the curriculum—from medical procedures to policy changes in health care provision—is also changing. The journal features reports of innovation and research in medical education, case studies, survey articles, practical guidelines, reviews of current literature and book reviews. All articles are peer reviewed.
期刊最新文献
Edgar Dale's Pyramid of Learning in medical education: Is it still a scientific myth after Ken Masters' research? To use or not to use: ERIC database for medical education research. "They already trusted us a lot": Allied health students' experiences of an innovative hospital, service-focussed placement model. Response to: 'When reality no longer meets the curriculum, what needs to adapt?' The importance of combined use of spacing and testing effects for complex skills training: A quasi-experimental study.
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