Tuesday, September 13, 2016

"Successfully navigating the first year of Surgical residency- Essentials for medical students and PGY1 residents".




                 I have included the booklet from American college of surgeons- " Successfully navigating the first year of Surgical residency- Essentials for medical students and PGY1 residents". This consists of cognitive, clinical and technical skills needed for a strong surgical foundation. This can act as a blueprint to implement competency based curriculum in surgical clerkship rotation and surgical residency programs. The link to this booklet  https://www.facs.org/~/media/files/education/essentials.ashx


                       

Saturday, September 10, 2016

A Surgeon’s Musings- Producing competent medical graduates



                           


                                

A Surgeon’s Musings- Producing competent medical graduates


Dear viewers,
          Greetings from “Surgical Educator”

          The ultimate aim of any medical institution or any medical educator is to produce competent medical graduates who can diagnose and manage many common ailments irrespective of the specialty. They should be able to save many patients with their theoretical knowledge and practical skills. At the turn of this millennium, the Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) in US introduced the six core competencies into medical education. Medical educators must now verify that trainees are skilled in these competencies: Patient Care, Medical Knowledge, Practice-Based Learning and Improvement, Interpersonal and Communication Skills, Professionalism, and Systems-Based Practice.

You can watch all my surgical teaching video casts in the following link: surgicaleducator.blogspot.com

ACGME GENERAL COMPETENCIES:

1. PATIENT CARE:
The competent graduate must be able to provide patient care that is compassionate, appropriate, and effective for the treatment of health problems and the promotion of health. He/she will be required to construct appropriate management strategies (diagnostic and therapeutic) for patients with common health care problems that may be emergent, acute or chronic, across the spectrum of disciplines, while considering costs for the patient and others. The graduate must be able to combine knowledge of basic biomedical, clinical, and cognate sciences to accomplish the above.
The competent graduate must be able to:
1.1 Obtain a full appropriate medical history
1.2 Perform a skillful physical examination
1.3 Formulate a differential diagnosis and problem list
1.4 Perform competently all medical and invasive procedures required for graduation
1.5 Perform, order and interpret diagnostic investigations that result in accurate diagnosis and treatment
1.6 Utilize data to reason and solve problems
1.7 Develop management plans
1.8 Consider cultural and socioeconomic factors in management options
1.9 Form an effective therapeutic relationship
1.10 Recognize life threatening health problems and institute appropriate initial therapy
1.11 Construct a therapeutic plan for relieving pain, ameliorating suffering and directed toward specific resolution of health problems
1.12 Counsel and educate patients and their families
1.13 Apply the principles of epidemiology and evidence-based medicine.

2. Medical Knowledge:
Competencies must include mastery of the necessary body of knowledge within the basic, clinical, and cognate sciences to manage patients’ health. Moreover, graduates must demonstrate the skills that will enable them to utilize the concepts and knowledge that will be discovered throughout the years following medical school.
2.1 Scientific principles of basic and clinical sciences that will enable him/her to competently practice evidence-based medicine
2.2 Determinants of poor health, disease-based risk factors, factors for disease prevention and healthy lifestyles (principles of preventive medicine)
2.3 Principles of health education
2.4 Principles of epidemiology and population-based medicine
2.5 Principles, risks, and possible benefits of complementary and alternative medicine
2.6 Concepts, principles, and application of evidence-based medicine
2.7 Investigatory and analytical thinking approach to clinical situations to be able to translate new and emerging concepts to improve patient care
2.8 Psychological, social, economic, and cultural factors pertaining to health
2.9 Legal and ethical concepts relating to health care.

3. Practice-Based Learning and Improvement:
The competent graduate must be able to study, reflect, and evaluate patient care practices, appraise and assimilate scientific evidence, and understand their learning needs. He/she must be committed to lifelong learning. The competent graduate sets clear learning goals, pursues them, and continuously integrates knowledge gained and applies it to improve medical care
3.2 Assesses his/her strengths and weakness in order to improve performance and identify effective ways to address limitations and enhance expertise
3.3 Accesses information effectively, efficiently, critically appraises the information and relates it to their patients’ health problems
3.4 Admits his/her limits of knowledge, knows what to do when those limits are reached, can deal with uncertainty, and respects the opinions of others
3.5 Recognizes the need to learn is continuous.

4. Interpersonal and Communication Skills:
The competent graduate provides compassionate, effective, culturally sensitive patient care while respecting patient autonomy.
4.1 Listens attentively and effectively
4.2 Communicates clearly with colleagues and consultants
4.3 Communicates clearly with patients, and patients' families
4.4 Manages difficult patients and/or difficult relationships such as angry or manipulative patients
4.5 Works effectively with other members of interdisciplinary health care teams, including translators.

5. Professionalism:
The competent graduate approaches medicine with integrity and respect for human dignity. They must demonstrate awareness of and commitment to the principles and responsibilities of medical professionalism.
5.1 Is aware of the unique doctor/ patient relationship
5.2 Knows and admits to his/her limits of knowledge
5.3 Recognizes the need to learn is continuous
5.4 Balances personal and professional commitments to ensure that the patient's medical needs are always addressed
5.5 Recognizes and avoids conflicts of interest in financial and organizational arrangements for the practice of medicine
5.6 Demonstrates integrity
5.7 Demonstrates respect for human dignity
5.8 Recognizes key ethical dilemmas and applies ethical principles
5.9 Demonstrates a commitment to ethical principles pertaining to provision or withholding of clinical care, confidentiality of patient information, and informed consent
5.10 Demonstrates a commitment to excellence and on-going professional development.

6. System-Based Practice:
The competent graduate demonstrates an awareness of and responsiveness to the larger context and systems of health care.
6.1 Understands the principles of health care delivery and can describe the organization, strengths and limits of various models of health care delivery systems
6.2 Defines health in terms of the community in which the patient lives (population-based medicine)
6.3 Describes how to appropriately utilize and integrate the services of multidisciplinary health providers
6.4 Practices cost-effective health care that does not compromise quality
6.5 Evaluates and integrates hospital and community resources well minimizes overuse of health care resources
6.6 Works collaboratively with other health professionals to optimize the quality of care rendered, reduce medical error and increase patient safety.






Saturday, September 3, 2016

PANCREATIC CANCER/ Obstructive Jaundice



                                    PANCREATIC CANCER/ Obstructive Jaundice


                                   
PANCREATIC CARCINOMA- Obstructive Jaundice

Dear Viewers,
          Greetings from “Surgical Educator”

          Today I have uploaded a video on one more cause for Obstructive Jaundice- Pancreatic Carcinoma. Only cancer in head of pancreas cause Obstructive Jaundice. I have talked about cancer in body and tail of pancreas as well. I have discussed the risk factors, pathology, clinical features, investigations, treatment and complications of pancreatic carcinoma. I have included a mind map and two algorithms. I hope you will enjoy this video. You can watch all my surgical teaching video casts in the following link.
Surgicaleducator.blogspot.com

Thank you for your support.