The patient panel conference experience: what patients can teach our residents about competency issues.

The patient panel conference experience: what patients can teach our residents about competency issues.

Acad Med. 2009 Dec;84(12):1833-9

Authors: Colbert CY, Mirkes C, Cable CT, Sibbitt SJ, VanZyl GO, Ogden PE

PURPOSE: In 2007, the Scott & White/Texas A&M HSC College of Medicine began requiring all internal medicine residents to attend quarterly patient panel conferences, during which former Scott & White patients speak frankly about their inpatient and outpatient experiences. The main purpose of this mixed-methods pilot study was to determine whether residents’ competency education could be enhanced via the conferences. METHOD: Of the 54 internal medicine residents in the residency program, 31, 39, and 41 participated in three patient panel conferences, respectively, between December 2007 and August 2008. Each resident completed an assessment that included a reflection on his or her own practice and the identification of competency issues highlighted by patients’ oral narratives. Content analyses of responses to open-ended questions were performed. Consensus on themes was reached. Descriptive statistics were run on quantitative data. RESULTS: Six themes were identified: improve communication with patients/families, improve patient care, improve professional behaviors, empathize with patients/families, display sensitivity to patients’/families’ needs/concerns, and recognize system issues. When asked if the conference highlighted competency problems, residents answered “agree” or “strongly agree” as follows: 82% for professionalism, 82.9% for systems-based practice, 85.2% for interpersonal and communication skills, and 84.4% for patient care. The majority were able to provide examples of competency issues. CONCLUSIONS: The patient panel conference experience was a powerful mechanism for enhancing competency education. The conferences were an effective means of presenting real-life examples of systems issues in the context of a hospital system.

19940596

The patient panel conference experience: what patients can teach our residents about competency issues.

In the clinic. Hypothyroidism.

In the clinic. Hypothyroidism.

Ann Intern Med. 2009 Dec 1;151(11):ITC61

Authors: McDermott MT

The content of In the Clinic is drawn from the clinical information and education resources of the American College of Physicians (ACP), including PIER (Physicians’ Information and Education Resource) and MKSAP (Medical Knowledge and Self Assessment Program). Annals of Internal Medicine editors develop In the Clinic from these primary sources in collaboration with the ACP’s Medical Education and Publishing division and with assistance of science writers and physician writers. Editorial consultants from PIER and MKSAP provide expert review of the content. Readers who are interested in these primary resources for more detail can consult www.acponline.org, http://pier.acponline.org, and other resources referenced within each issue of In the Clinic.

19949140

In the clinic. Hypothyroidism.

Sins of our fathers: two of The Four Doctors and their roles in the development of techniques to permit covert autopsies.

Sins of our fathers: two of The Four Doctors and their roles in the development of techniques to permit covert autopsies.

Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2009 Dec;133(12):1969-74

Authors: Wright JR

CONTEXT: -Sir William Osler, MD, and Howard Kelly, MD, were probably the preeminent practitioners of their respective specialties, internal medicine and gynecology, during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Both were passionately interested in pathology. Although not widely known, during the 1880s, both allegedly pioneered “arm’s length” methods to perform covert autopsies that involved removing abdominal and even thoracic organs via the anus, vagina, or a small perineal incision hidden behind the scrotum. These techniques were allegedly used, at least occasionally, to circumvent autopsy-consent regulations and to procure teaching specimens for medical museums. OBJECTIVE: -To examine the historical evidence for these alleged events and to examine these behaviors within the context of (1) the need to obtain pathologic specimens for teaching gross pathology and clinical pathologic correlation to medical trainees, (2) the loose interpretation of autopsy-consent regulations at “charity hospitals” during the late 19th century, (3) the medical museum movement, and (4) the paternalistic approach to the practice of medicine typical of the times. DESIGN: -To address these issues, standard historiographic methods were used to examine available primary and secondary historical sources. RESULTS: -The evidence suggests that Kelly developed and published 3 arm’s length methods for covert autopsies while a resident in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and that both Kelly and Osler pioneered the use of these methods in the 1880s. The brief history of these “minimally invasive” autopsy techniques is also examined by reviewing 19th and 20th century textbooks of autopsy technique. CONCLUSIONS: -Howard Kelly, MD, and William Osler, MD, pioneered arm’s length methods for covert autopsies. In fact, this activity appears to have initiated the 2 doctors’ long professional relationship.

19961254

Sins of our fathers: two of The Four Doctors and their roles in the development of techniques to permit covert autopsies.

Prognostic significance of serum uric acid in patients admitted to the Department of Medicine.

Prognostic significance of serum uric acid in patients admitted to the Department of Medicine.

Am J Med Sci. 2010 Jan;339(1):15-21

Authors: Wasserman A, Shnell M, Boursi B, Guzner-Gur H

BACKGROUND: Hyperuricemia has been linked to proatherogenic processes, including increased oxidative stress and leukocyte activation, and was shown to predict adverse prognosis in heart failure, renal failure, and hypertension. Recently, serum uric acid (SUA) was shown to be an independent predictor of long-term mortality in patients with cardiovascular diseases. However, the prognostic significance of SUA for the short-term outcome of admitted medical patients is unknown. METHODS: Initial SUA, together with epidemiological, clinical, and laboratory data, was analyzed for a prospective cohort of 650 consecutive adult patients admitted to the department of internal medicine during a 3-month period. RESULTS: The mean, median, and range of SUA at admission were 6.1 +/- 2.7, 5.6, and 1.2 to 24 mg/dL, respectively. Increased SUA was significantly correlated with age, gender, comorbidities (coronary heart disease, heart failure, hypertension, diabetes, renal failure, and gout), use of diuretics, and current admission for cardiovascular diseases but not with current diagnosis of infection, malignancy, or inflammatory diseases, nor with C-reactive protein. However, SUA significantly correlated with mortality (7.7 versus 6 mg/L, P < 0.025) and was an independent predictor of mortality in a multivariate regression analysis (odds ratio: 1.11; confidence interval: 1.003-1.218; P = 0.04), with a significant difference in mortality between normal SUA (<6 mg/dL) with 5% mortality and high SUA (>12 mg/dL) with 27% mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Initial SUA is an independent predictor of mortality in admitted medical patients. Whether significant asymptomatic hyperuricemia should be treated remains to be determined in further studies.

19996731

Prognostic significance of serum uric acid in patients admitted to the Department of Medicine.


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