Tanios Dagher, Julie Oyler, Valerie G Press, Tia Kostas, Joyce Tang, Robert Hight, Mark Saathoff, Marie McKinnon, Jenna Ford Jackson, Michael McGinty, Korry Schwanz, Jeanne Farnan, Vineet Arora, Irsk Anderson
{"title":"在医学院现有课程中开发和实施体验式纵向卫生系统科学课程。","authors":"Tanios Dagher, Julie Oyler, Valerie G Press, Tia Kostas, Joyce Tang, Robert Hight, Mark Saathoff, Marie McKinnon, Jenna Ford Jackson, Michael McGinty, Korry Schwanz, Jeanne Farnan, Vineet Arora, Irsk Anderson","doi":"10.1097/ACM.0000000000005784","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Problem: </strong>Medical school graduates enter a complex health care delivery system involving interprofessional teamwork and multifaceted value-based patient care decisions. However, current curricula on health systems science (HSS) are piecemeal, lecture based, and confined to preclinical training.</p><p><strong>Approach: </strong>The VISTA program is a longitudinal, immersive learning curriculum integrated into the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine curriculum between 2016 and 2018. Key components include a unit-based nursing interprofessional team experience, a discharge objective structured clinical examination (OSCE), a patient safety simulation, and the implementation of a Choosing Wisely SmartPhrase. Graduates before 2016-2017 and after 2018-2020 VISTA implementation completed a Likert-style survey assessing attitudes, knowledge, and behaviors on HSS topics. A free response question solicited improvement areas. The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) Graduation Questionnaire (GQ) was also examined.</p><p><strong>Outcomes: </strong>The overall VISTA survey response rate was 59%, with 126 fourth-year medical student respondents before VISTA and 120 after VISTA. Compared with pre-VISTA graduates, post-VISTA graduates reported a significantly higher rate of competence on the HSS questions, with the greatest increases seen in effective communication at discharge (n = 73/126 [57.9%] to 116/120 [96.7%], P < .001), knowledge on safety event reporting (n = 53/126 [42.1%] to 96/120 [79.8%], P < .001), and considering costs in making health care decisions (n = 76/126 [60.3%] to 117/120 [97.5%], P < .001). All were directly addressed through experiential learning interventions, and 2 were intended practice behaviors. VISTA graduate responses to free-text questions demonstrated a more nuanced understanding of HSS compared with pre-VISTA responses. The AAMC GQ data showed increased agreement with an item that mapped to HSS understanding.</p><p><strong>Next steps: </strong>The VISTA program provides a model for institutions to enhance HSS education between curricular overhauls. Next steps include implementing value-added roles and additional immersive learning exercises.</p>","PeriodicalId":50929,"journal":{"name":"Academic Medicine","volume":" ","pages":"971-975"},"PeriodicalIF":5.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Development and Implementation of an Experiential Longitudinal Health Systems Science Thread Into an Existing Medical School Curriculum.\",\"authors\":\"Tanios Dagher, Julie Oyler, Valerie G Press, Tia Kostas, Joyce Tang, Robert Hight, Mark Saathoff, Marie McKinnon, Jenna Ford Jackson, Michael McGinty, Korry Schwanz, Jeanne Farnan, Vineet Arora, Irsk Anderson\",\"doi\":\"10.1097/ACM.0000000000005784\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Problem: </strong>Medical school graduates enter a complex health care delivery system involving interprofessional teamwork and multifaceted value-based patient care decisions. However, current curricula on health systems science (HSS) are piecemeal, lecture based, and confined to preclinical training.</p><p><strong>Approach: </strong>The VISTA program is a longitudinal, immersive learning curriculum integrated into the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine curriculum between 2016 and 2018. Key components include a unit-based nursing interprofessional team experience, a discharge objective structured clinical examination (OSCE), a patient safety simulation, and the implementation of a Choosing Wisely SmartPhrase. Graduates before 2016-2017 and after 2018-2020 VISTA implementation completed a Likert-style survey assessing attitudes, knowledge, and behaviors on HSS topics. A free response question solicited improvement areas. The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) Graduation Questionnaire (GQ) was also examined.</p><p><strong>Outcomes: </strong>The overall VISTA survey response rate was 59%, with 126 fourth-year medical student respondents before VISTA and 120 after VISTA. Compared with pre-VISTA graduates, post-VISTA graduates reported a significantly higher rate of competence on the HSS questions, with the greatest increases seen in effective communication at discharge (n = 73/126 [57.9%] to 116/120 [96.7%], P < .001), knowledge on safety event reporting (n = 53/126 [42.1%] to 96/120 [79.8%], P < .001), and considering costs in making health care decisions (n = 76/126 [60.3%] to 117/120 [97.5%], P < .001). All were directly addressed through experiential learning interventions, and 2 were intended practice behaviors. VISTA graduate responses to free-text questions demonstrated a more nuanced understanding of HSS compared with pre-VISTA responses. 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Development and Implementation of an Experiential Longitudinal Health Systems Science Thread Into an Existing Medical School Curriculum.
Problem: Medical school graduates enter a complex health care delivery system involving interprofessional teamwork and multifaceted value-based patient care decisions. However, current curricula on health systems science (HSS) are piecemeal, lecture based, and confined to preclinical training.
Approach: The VISTA program is a longitudinal, immersive learning curriculum integrated into the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine curriculum between 2016 and 2018. Key components include a unit-based nursing interprofessional team experience, a discharge objective structured clinical examination (OSCE), a patient safety simulation, and the implementation of a Choosing Wisely SmartPhrase. Graduates before 2016-2017 and after 2018-2020 VISTA implementation completed a Likert-style survey assessing attitudes, knowledge, and behaviors on HSS topics. A free response question solicited improvement areas. The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) Graduation Questionnaire (GQ) was also examined.
Outcomes: The overall VISTA survey response rate was 59%, with 126 fourth-year medical student respondents before VISTA and 120 after VISTA. Compared with pre-VISTA graduates, post-VISTA graduates reported a significantly higher rate of competence on the HSS questions, with the greatest increases seen in effective communication at discharge (n = 73/126 [57.9%] to 116/120 [96.7%], P < .001), knowledge on safety event reporting (n = 53/126 [42.1%] to 96/120 [79.8%], P < .001), and considering costs in making health care decisions (n = 76/126 [60.3%] to 117/120 [97.5%], P < .001). All were directly addressed through experiential learning interventions, and 2 were intended practice behaviors. VISTA graduate responses to free-text questions demonstrated a more nuanced understanding of HSS compared with pre-VISTA responses. The AAMC GQ data showed increased agreement with an item that mapped to HSS understanding.
Next steps: The VISTA program provides a model for institutions to enhance HSS education between curricular overhauls. Next steps include implementing value-added roles and additional immersive learning exercises.
期刊介绍:
Academic Medicine, the official peer-reviewed journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, acts as an international forum for exchanging ideas, information, and strategies to address the significant challenges in academic medicine. The journal covers areas such as research, education, clinical care, community collaboration, and leadership, with a commitment to serving the public interest.