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anonymous

How to write and evaluate effective questions: - 4 views

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    Simply put, writing effective questions is easier than it might seem. You will more often than not observe gains from the very act of engaging your student in the mind tasks of metacognition and retrieval practice and then peer discussion. The questions will of course improve once you get feed back from students and make tweaks.
anonymous

Can We Bridge the Gap between Theory and Clinical Practice? - 2 views

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    The use of entrustable professional activities (EPAs) and statements of awarded responsibility (STARs) may bridge a potential gap between the theory of competency-based education and clinical practice.
anonymous

Teaching, mentoring and leadership in general practice - 0 views

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    An Outline of The RACGP Curriculum for Australian General Practice 2011
anonymous

Self-assessment and students' study strategies in a community of clinical practice: A q... - 1 views

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    " This research suggests that the theoretical advantages linked to the self-assessment process are a result of its feedback component rather than the practice of self-assessment isolated from feedback. Further research exploring the effects of different contextual and personal factors on students' self-assessment is needed."
Dingwall PGME

Professionalism: What is it? - 1 views

shared by Dingwall PGME on 06 Dec 13 - No Cached
    • Dingwall PGME
       
      CanMEDS Professional: 1. demonstrate commitment to their patients, profession, and society through ethical practice 2. demonstrate a commitment to their patients, profession, and society through participation in profession-led regulation 3. demonstrate a commitment to physician health and sustainable practice
  • According the CanMEDs framework, developed by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, the professional role of physicians is defined as a commitment to “the health and well-being of individuals and society through ethical practice, professionled regulation, and high personal standards of behaviour”
  • The Canadian Medical Association considers the three major features of medical professionalism to be clinical independence, self-regulation and the ethic of care
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • The needs of the patient should always trump the financial priorities of the physician. Every skill, every decision, every morsel of scientific knowledge — all are to be used to better serve patients.
anonymous

Social Media: a new frontier in reflective practice - 3 views

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    How do we engage medical students in reflective practice?
Anne Marie Cunningham

Wiley InterScience :: JOURNALS :: Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice - 0 views

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    Issue of Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice which explores limits of medical knowlege... EBM vs personalised care
anonymous

Transforming Practice - NEJM - 2 views

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    "By offloading tasks from the 15-minute visit in order to prioritize the patient's agenda, adding group, telephone, and electronic encounters, and reorganizing services with the aim of maximizing the health of a practice's entire patient population, innovative primary care practices could lead primary care out of crisis into an era of renewal."
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    This article seems to advocate the trend in UK based primary care- but key questions remain unanswered, can trust be transferred from the individual doctor to the team? Does this dilute the 'doctor as drug' benefit?
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Better Health » Are Face-to-Face Office Visits Really Required to Provide the... - 0 views

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    Every time you need to use health care in today's world, a gauntlet of obstacles stands between you and the service. Not much different than visiting Dr. Hippocrates, way back when...
anonymous

Narrative-Based Medicine: Potential, Pitfalls, and Practice - 0 views

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    "Narratives have always been a vital part of medicine. Stories about patients, the experience of caring for them, and their recovery from illness have always been shared-among physicians as well as among patients and their relatives. With the evolution of "modern" medicine, narratives were increasingly neglected in favor of "facts and findings," which were regarded as more scientific and objective. Now, in recent years medical narrative is changing-from the stories about patients and their illnesses, patient narratives and the unfolding and interwoven story between health care professionals and patients are both gaining momentum, leading to the creation or defining of narrative-based medicine (NBM). The term was coined deliberately to mark its distinction from evidence-based medicine (EBM); in fact, NBM was propagated to counteract the shortcomings of EBM.1,2 But what is NBM? Is it a specific therapeutic tool, a special form of physician-patient communication, a qualitative research tool, or does it simply signify a particular attitude towards patients and doctoring? It can be all of the above with different forms or genres of narrative or practical approach called for depending on the field of application. "
anonymous

Reflection and reflective practice in health professions education: a systematic review. - 0 views

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    "Our aim was to understand the key variables influencing this educational process, identify gaps in the evidence, and to explore any implications for educational practice and research."
anonymous

The Critical Role of Feedback in Formative Instructional Practices - 1 views

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    This paper (a) describes the role feedback plays in formative instructional practices, (b) suggests some evidence-based instructional strategies practitioners can employ to increase opportunities for feedback about their instruction, and (c) recommends ways to enhance the effectiveness of the feedback students receive.
anonymous

JMIR--Understanding the Factors That Influence the Adoption and Meaningful Use of Socia... - 1 views

shared by anonymous on 07 Oct 12 - No Cached
Dianne Rees liked it
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    Based on the results of this study, the use of social media applications may be seen as an efficient and effective method for physicians to keep up-to-date and to share newly acquired medical knowledge with other physicians within the medical community and to improve the quality of patient care. Future studies are needed to examine the impact of the meaningful use of social media on physicians' knowledge, attitudes, skills, and behaviors in practice.
anonymous

Longitudinal integrated rural placements: a social learning systems perspective | Conve... - 0 views

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    "Longitudinal, integrated clinical placement models can be understood as SLSs comprising synergistic and complementary learning spaces, in which students engage and participate in multiple CoPs. This occurs in a context shaped by unique influences of the geography of place. This engagement provides for a range of student learning experiences, which contribute to clinical learning and the development of a more sophisticated professional identity. A range of pedagogical and practical strategies can be embedded within this SLS to enhance student learning."
anonymous

Patient whiteboards as a communication tool in the hospital - 0 views

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    "Despite differences in practice patterns of nurses and physicians in using whiteboards, our findings suggest that all providers value their potential as a tool to improve teamwork, communication, and patient care. Successful adoption of whiteboard use may be enhanced through strategies that emphasize a patient-centered focus while also addressing important barriers to use."
anonymous

Resident Exchange - 0 views

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    "Welcome to the Resident Exchange, a unique place for medical residents to share cases, learn and connect. Each week, we'll provide you with thought-provoking cases and discussions from a growing network of residents across various hospitals and specialties. The topics have been handpicked to provide keen clinical encounters, enhance practice-based learning and stimulate discussion via board examination-style questions. We look forward to your participation. "
anonymous

Beyond knowledge and skills: the use of a Delphi study to develop a technology-mediated... - 0 views

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    There is a need for a cultural change in clinical education, in which those involved with the professional training of healthcare professionals perceive teaching as more than the transmission of knowledge and technical skills. Process-oriented teaching practices that integrate technology as part of a carefully designed curriculum may have the potential to facilitate the development of capable healthcare graduates who are able to navigate the complexity of health systems and patient management in ways that go beyond the application of knowledge and skills.
anonymous

Be FAIR to students: Four principles that lead to more effective learning, Medical Teac... - 0 views

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    A teacher is a professional not a technician. An understanding of some basic principles about learning can inform the teacher or trainer in their day-to-day practice as a teacher or a trainer. The FAIR principles are: provide feedback to the student, engage the student in active learning, individualize the learning to the personal needs of the student and make the learning relevant.
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