Clinical Training Manual
Clinical Training Manual
Clinical Training Manual
Rev 05/25/16
CONTENTS
Introduction
Mission
Welcome to the Clinical Years
SECTION ONE
Overview
I. General Information
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
1
1
3
6
10
11
13
14
15
15
16
17
18
20
24
25
25
26
27
E. Financial Services
....
35
36
37
38
38
SECTION TWO
Clinical Curriculum
I. Achieving Competence
A. Introduction
B. Active Learning, Independent Study and Student Portfolio ...
C. Competency .....
39
39
40
Internal Medicine ..
Obstetrics and Gynecology ....
Pediatrics ....
Psychiatry .
Surgery ..
Family Medicine ..
48
56
64
79
84
96
102
104
105
SECTION THREE
Appendices
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.
H.
I.
J.
K.
L.
110
124
134
136
137
141
145
150
158
159
160
161
INTRODUCTION
The Clinical Training Manual serves three important functions:
1.
2.
3.
The three sections of the Manual detail the structure of the clinical program, the
clinical curriculum, the relationships with affiliated hospitals and the procedures,
rules and regulations required to function in health care settings and apply for postgraduate training in the US. This Manual has evolved over thirty years in response to
accrediting agencies, residency and licensing requirements, clinical faculty input and
the cumulative experience of thousands of SGU medical students who have
successfully completed the clinical terms. We hope that students and faculty use this
Manual to help them with both long range educational goals and day-to-day
functioning. We recommend that students read this Manual carefully and use it as a
reference. This Manual is subject to change and continuously revised and updated as
necessary.
iii
The clinical years are demanding, more so than any previous experience in your life
and probably more than you can conceive or appreciate at this time. These demands
will consume almost one hundred percent of your time. You may have difficulty in
adequately meeting the requirements placed on you if you also have to cope with
demanding personal problems. Your clinical supervisors must judge you on the basis
of your performance as you would be judged as a practicing physician. Little
allowance can be made for what is going on in your personal life. If you are having
personal problems that interfere with your ability to function as a clinical student, you
should seek help. The Office of Clinical Studies, Dean of Students, Directors of Medical
Education (DME), Clerkship Directors (CD) and faculty are available to help.
Missing a lecture during the basic science years was not considered a serious
transgression. During your clinical years, however, missing a lecture or failing to fulfill
a ward assignment will call into question your ability to accept the necessary
responsibilities required of you as a physician. No unexcused absences are permitted.
Permission to leave a rotation, even for a day, requires prior approval from a Clerkship
Director or Director of Medical Education.
Your clinical years should be an exciting experience. Your dedicated ambition to
become a physician, your maturity and your preparation over the last two years will
enable you to handle the demands of the clinical clerkships without difficulty.
You will now begin the work for which you have been preparing for so many years.
You will find it infinitely challenging, yet sometimes frustrating; enormously fun, but
sometimes tragic; very rewarding and sometimes humbling. Make the most of it.
Stephen Weitzman, MD
Dean, School of Medicine
SECTION ONE
I.
GENERAL INFORMATION
A.
St. Georges University (SGU) has provided high-quality clinical education for over thirty years. More
than 60 formally affiliated teaching hospitals in the United States (US) and the United Kingdom (UK)
provide clinical training in terms 6-10. The strong performance of its students on externally
administered examinations and their success in obtaining and performing well in postgraduate
training programs has validated the St. Georges method of decentralized, hospital-based clinical
education.
Recent years have witnessed the successful development of the Clinical Centers. These are
affiliated teaching hospitals, or groups of affiliated teaching hospitals, that offer four or five clinical
cores, subinternships and electives, and can train at least 24 3 rd year students at all times as well as
additional 4th year students. Students can spend all or most of their required two years of clinical
training at clinical centers. This innovation reduces the need for students to change hospitals,
permits the clinical curriculum to be more effectively standardized and enables the development of a
stronger and individually-tailored fourth year.
In addition to clinical centers, individualized programs for students who prefer other geographical
venues or who wish to train in the UK can be arranged in major affiliated hospitals in the US and the
UK. Major affiliated hospitals provide some of both third and fourth year requirements. The school
also has affiliated hospitals which provide only fourth year rotations and electives (limited affiliates).
Appendix A provides information about all clinical centers, major affiliated hospitals and limited
affiliated hospitals in the US and UK. Clinical training occurs exclusively on services with postgraduate
training programs. Many of our affiliated hospitals and clinical centers also train medical students
from UK and US medical schools.
B.
A formal affiliation agreement between SGU and its affiliated hospitals and clinical centers exists for
the purpose of establishing a clinical training program for the Universitys third and fourth year
medical students. Clinical centers and hospitals accept qualified students into organized, patientbased teaching programs and provide additional instruction with pertinent lectures, conferences,
ward rounds and seminars.
The hospital and its staff supervise the educational program and assess each students progress
during the clinical attachment there. Within the bounds of its own teaching programs, it adheres to
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the precepts and standards of the University teaching program as outlined and detailed in the latest
edition of the Clinical Training Manual (CTM).
Based on the appropriate qualifications and recommendation from the hospital, SGU appoints a
Director of Medical Education (DME) who is the hospital administrator responsible for the SGU
student program and is the liaison with the School of Medicine. These designees receive formal
appointments to the School of Medicines faculty that are commensurate with their qualifications
and duties. Their principal role is to supervise the clinical program and ensure its quality and its
conformity with the Universitys guidelines as described in the CTM and the Faculty Handbook.
Numerous members of the hospitals medical staff, as well as its house staff, play an active role in the
teaching of St. Georges students; many also have clinical faculty appointments. This group of clinical
teachers gives orientations, lectures and conferences. They conduct rounds, teach clinical and
manual skills, conduct mid-core formative assessments and summative end-of-clerkship oral
examinations, keep students records and help formulate students final grades. For the purpose of
achieving uniformity in the clinical training program at different sites and University-wide integration,
SGUs clinical faculty participate in the Universitys ongoing educational activities, administrative
meetings, faculty senate and clinical department meetings.
The University has the sole and final right to evaluate the students total academic accomplishments
and make all determinations as to whether or not to advance a student to the next level within the
medical school, to fail or pass the student, to determine remediation if necessary or to grant the
individual the Doctor of Medicine degree.
The University budgets a specified sum of money to help defray the expenses incurred in running the
teaching program at each hospital; provides professional liability insurance coverage for all its
students working in any of its affiliated hospitals; ensures that all students fulfill health care
requirements required by hospitals; completes a criminal background check and only assigns
students to hospitals with academic qualifications consonant with the demands of the clinical
program provided by the hospital.
All hospitals have been carefully selected to ensure their facilities meet SGUs standards. They must
demonstrate a continuing commitment to medical education and furnish the necessary
infrastructure to provide a successful clinical training program: integrating medical students into the
health care team, providing access to the library and other ancillary facilities and supervising
involvement with patients.
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C.
GENERAL COMMENTS
All students are scheduled and graduate on time unless they take extended leaves of absence or
have academic difficulties. SGU continues to have enough clinical places to make sure that all
students can complete their clinical curriculum and graduate on time.
Students should not become overly concerned with clinical placements. A future career in medicine for example, the ability to obtain a residency program in the US - will depend on a students
academic record. The particular hospital in which students train or the order in which they do
rotations are insignificant when compared to USMLE Step I and II scores, GPA, LOR, MSPE and
interviews.
While the school appreciates that some assignments or schedules may be inconvenient, our priorities
are assuring that all students are placed, that they are all afforded an opportunity for clinical training
and that agreements with our affiliated hospitals are fulfilled. SGU considers all of our hospitals
substantially equivalent in terms of the educational experiences they provide. Detailed information
about each hospital will not enable students to make a rational decision about whether an individual
hospital is best for any individual student. In the US the main reason for a student to choose one
geographical area over another relates to convenience in terms of living arrangements or being close
to home. Students have the opportunity to explain this on the Electronic Placement Information
Form (EPIF).
During term 5 the school sends a list of US hospitals by geographical area that are available. Only the
hospitals on that list are available to each class for starting core rotations. In the US some hospitals
start clinical students only in the spring, some only in the fall and some both times. Students, who do
not start on time and take LOA, will be placed based on hospital availability. However, taking an LOA
instead of starting on time must be mentioned in students transcripts and MSPE. Residency program
directors may look unfavorably on LOAs.
Completing the Electronic Placement Information Form
The school sends an electronic form to Term 5 students who return the completed form to the Office
of Clinical Studies. Placement preparation starts when students submit their EPIF with their updated
permanent address, phone number, and request for visa support letters, if applicable. On this form
students should indicate whether US or UK placement is desired, whether they are started at the
Northumbria Campus, their intended starting timeframe, and if necessary, specific information
regarding a special consideration. Special consideration in terms of placement includes:
available housing near a specific hospital
special family circumstances
placement with specific individuals
other special issues
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Students can also indicate on their form that they have no particular preference, and they will be
placed by us in one of our hospitals. This will be arranged by the Office of Clinical Studies on an
individual basis.
US CLINICAL PLACEMENT
The placement process takes place after students leave Grenada and consists of a four step process:
1. Two to three months after completing Term 5 students must email the placement
coordinators at clined@sgu.edu confirming the month they intend to begin clinical rotations
and the date they expect to take Step I. At this time they must also complete the online Step I
preparation survey.
2. One month before starting clinical training the placement coordinators email notification of
each students clinical assignment.
3. Students can only start at a hospital after being confirmed by the Office of Clinical Studies
which requires that students fulfill the following:
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
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4. The Office of Clinical Studies sends confirmed placement letters with orientation information
to students who have completed items A-G.
The Office of Clinical Studies assigns all 3rd year students. The school can not guarantee that
placement will be according to any special requests. In general, a students GPA, USMLE Step I score
or citizenship does not determine priority. The placement process starts by trying to accommodate
all students requests. This is often not possible. In those cases the clinical placement coordinators
will review all the information and make a decision. Final determination is frequently made by
lottery.
Under no circumstances should a student contact or arrive at any hospital until receiving a confirmed
placement letter; to do so is contrary to school and hospital policy and may result in disciplinary
action against the student. However, in terms of housing, once students receive their assignments,
they can plan on travel and housing arrangements.
After starting at a US hospital, students must do all third year rotations available to them in that
hospital program. The Office of Clinical Studies will subsequently schedule any remaining third year
rotations not available at the starting hospital on an individual basis. For fourth year rotations,
students can apply to any of our affiliated hospitals listed in the CTM.
US Clinical Placement Timetable
For those students who wish to train in the US, a passing score on the USMLE Step I is required.
Most students take about 8 weeks to prepare for USMLE Step I after leaving Grenada. After taking
Step I, students should email a copy of their test completion receipt to (clined@sgu.edu) in the
Office of Clinical Studies. Scores take approximately one month to be returned to students. Students
should forward the PDF file they receive from ECFMG to clined@sgu.edu in the Office of Clinical
Studies. Students should not wait until receiving their Step I score before completing the other
requirements (A-F above).
Students should continually check their SGUSOM email account for their score report and other
information. Students who fail USMLE Step I or take an LOA should notify the Office of Clinical
Studies when they intend to return from leave or pass USMLE Step I and are eligible to be placed.
The school will place them based on hospital availability.
UK Clinical Placement
Students who wish to go to the UK should indicate that on the EPIF. Students can start clinical
training in the UK providing they have passed Step I or have not taken Step I but have a passing score
on the schools Basic Science Comprehensive Exam II. Students who have failed the USMLE Step I will
not be permitted to do rotations in the UK or start clinical training anywhere. Students starting
clinical rotations in the UK must complete at least 24 weeks of rotations in the UK. The UK office will
send placement confirmation notification once the requirements mentioned above are met.
Students initially assigned to a US hospital may go to the UK at a later date for third year rotations
not offered in that hospital or for fourth year rotations.
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-6-
CHAIR
ASSOCIATE CHAIRS
Internal Medicine
Surgery
James Rucinski, MD
Pediatrics
Phyllis Weiner, MD
Ob/Gyn
Paul Kastell, MD
Psychiatry
Arnold Winston, MD
Family Medicine
Everett Schlam, MD
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4. CONTACT INFORMATION
a. OFFICE OF THE DEAN:
Any general questions or problems that arise in the clinical training program can be addressed
to:
OfficeoftheDeanSGUSOM@sgu.edu
Specific questions can be addressed to:
Leslie Marino, Assistant to the Dean, at lmarino@sgu.edu
Deborah Saccente, Administrative Assistant to the Dean, at dsaccent@sgu.edu
For health records:
Susan Conway, RN, MBA, Director of Student Health Records Department, at
sconway@sgu.edu
b. OFFICE OF CLINICAL STUDIES:
Leslie Marino, at lmarino@sgu.edu
FACULTY SUPPORT:
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STUDENT SUPPORT:
Most students complete the Doctor of Medicine MD Program at SGU on an optimal track that can
lead to graduation in less than four years. The MD program is designed to be continuous with
minimal time off. Each term serves as a building block for subsequent terms. Prolonged breaks
between terms disrupt the educational experience; leaves of absence are discouraged. Medical
school to a large extent is preparatory for postgraduate training. In the US, residency program
directors look for graduates able to handle the demands of postgraduate training and to complete
three to five years of a residency program without interruption. A gauge of this is a students
satisfactory academic progress through medical school.
At SGU, students must sit the Basic Science Comprehensive Examination 1 (BSCE 1) after their first
year of studies. The students, faculty and administration use the BSCE 1 as a formative exam.
Students must pass the Basic Science Comprehensive Examination 2 (BSCE 2) near the end of the fifth
term or USMLE Step 1 after completing Term 5. Upon passing BSCE 2 and successfully completing
terms 1-5, students are eligible to enter the clinical program. SGU does not require US Medical
Licensure Examination (USMLE) Step 1 for promotion. However, the students who take Step 1 and
fail it will not be promoted into the clinical years until they pass. Most students take this examination
in order to train at affiliated clinical centers and hospitals in the US. Six week review courses are
commercially available and are optional. Since SGU students have consistently shown excellence on
this examination, the administration believes that students, unless otherwise counseled by the Dean
of Students office, should take Step 1 no later than two months after completing their basic science
program. This will allow them to begin the clinical program at the earliest possible date.
August Entry Optimal Track Time Line
1. Students complete basic sciences in May of the second year following their matriculation, i.e., no
leaves of absence (LOA) nor alternate programs.
2. Students who wish to start clinical training in the US take USMLE Step 1 by the first week in
July and start in August or September, approximately two years after matriculation.
3.
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3. Students who wish to start clinical training in the UK do not have to take USMLE Step 1 and can
start in the UK in July if they have passed BSCE 2.
Students complete the clinical curriculum no later than June in the second year following the
commencement of clinical training, i.e., clinical training begins July, August or September 2011 and
ends no later than June 2013 in time for graduation. This is less than four years after matriculation.
Please note that terms 6-10 represent an intensive educational experience. Students who start in
September have approximately ninety weeks to complete an eighty week curriculum. During this
time, they also study for and take USMLE Step 2, CK and CS, or the Final Comprehensive Written
Examination and the Final Clinical Competency Exam (FCCE) and apply for residencies.
January Entry Optimal Track Time Line
1. Students complete basic sciences in December of the second year following their matriculation,
i.e., no LOA nor decelerated programs.
2. Students who wish to start clinical training in the US take USMLE Step 1 in March and start
clinical training in May/June of their third year.
3. Students who wish to star clinical training in the UK do not have to take Step 1 and can start
in January or July if they have passed BSCE 2.
While students can graduate in December in the second year after starting clinical training, most
students choose to graduate in June, approximately two years after starting clinical training. This
program offers about 100 weeks to complete the 80 week clinical curriculum, study for USMLE
Step 2 or the Final Comprehensive Written Examination and the FCCE and apply for residencies.
F. Alternate Paths
The Optimal Track is not a requirement nor is it the best track for all students. The medical school
administration feels it is more important to establish a solid academic record and graduate later
rather than try to make the optimal graduation date with a poor academic record.
Students may decelerate during their clinical years after consultation with one of the Deans or
OCGSD advisors. This deceleration will allow students to spend additional time preparing for USMLE
Step 2 CS and CK to participate in research activities.
G. The Medical Student Research Institute
SGUSOM has invested extensively in developing a novel web-based Medical Student Research
Institute (MSRI). This is part of our mission to establish research as an integral component of the MD
program. The MSRI grew out of our conviction that research is necessary for progress in the
understanding of health and disease and for improving patient care. The MSRI provides an
opportunity for exceptional students to spend part of their medical school experience involved in
basic, clinical, translational or social science research under expert faculty mentorship. Students
have the opportunity to conduct research within the specialties that interest them with expectations
that this will shape their career goals and help build an academic track record that will be viewed
favorably by competitive residency programs.
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II.
CLINICAL YEARS
A.
The 80 weeks of clinical education in terms 6-10 encompass forty two weeks of core rotations,
sixteen weeks of additional required rotations and twenty two weeks of electives. The core rotations
define the third year of medical school and include twelve weeks of internal medicine, twelve weeks
of surgery and six weeks each of pediatrics, obstetrics/gynecology, psychiatry and, frequently, family
medicine. (Students who do not complete family medicine in the 3 rd year must do so in the 4th year).
The third year is a structured educational experience similar for all students. The Office of Clinical
Studies along with the affiliated hospitals controls the scheduling of the third year. The fourth year
consists of four weeks of family medicine (if not done in the 3 rd year), four weeks of a subinternship
in medicine, four weeks of a medicine elective, four weeks of a pediatric subinternship or elective
and twenty-two weeks of electives of student choice. Each student can schedule the fourth year
based on individual educational interests and career choice.
There is no optimal sequence of core rotations. They are generally completed before taking
subinternships, additional requirements or electives. On occasion, a hospital may schedule a primary
care rotation or elective anytime in the third year. The listing below does not indicate the sequence
of courses. Core rotation schedules are determined by the hospital and the Office of Clinical Studies.
All core rotations as well as the medicine sub-internship and medicine elective must be done at
affiliated hospitals. All of these requirements must be at least 4 consecutive weeks.
The Clinical Curriculum
(6th through 10th Term)
Core Rotations
Weeks
Internal Medicine
12
Pediatrics
Psychiatry
Surgery
12
Additional Requirements
Medicine subinternship
Family Medicine
4-6
Electives
20 - 22
TOTAL:
80
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B.
SGU has a formal administrative and academic structure for conducting its clinical program at
affiliated hospitals. A DME is on site at each clinical center and affiliated teaching hospital. The DME
is a member of the SGU faculty and oversees the scheduling of rotations, delineates holidays and
vacation time, administers examinations provided by SGU, determines the scope of student
activities, deals with student concerns and is responsible for acute medical problems that students
might develop. The DME reviews the overall program with a Dean or Associate Dean at the time of
their visits to the hospital. DMEs at clinical centers are members of the Clinical Council, the main
advisory body to the Dean for the clinical terms.
In addition to the DME, a Clerkship Director (CD) is appointed for each core rotation in which St.
Georges students participate at each affiliated hospital. The CD is responsible administratively to
the DME and academically to the appropriate departmental chair of SGU. Five clinical departments
represent the five core rotation specialties. SGU appoints a full-time chair for each of these
departments responsible for the educational content of the core rotation at all affiliated hospitals.
The school also appoints associate chairs in the UK and elsewhere when necessary to help coordinate
and supervise the educational program at all sites. Departmental Chairs and Associate Chairs as well
as DMEs, CDs and others who teach SGU School of Medicine students are appointed to the clinical
faculty and are members of the faculty senate. All clinical faculty are available to students for advice
on managing their medical training and careers (e.g., choosing electives, specialties, and postgraduation training).
Site visits are made by administrative and academic members of the medical school to affiliated
hospitals on a regular basis. The purpose of these visits is to ensure compliance with the Universitys
standards, curriculum and policies, to review the educational program and to discuss any problems
that arise on site. In addition to meetings with the students, the site visits include meetings with the
DME, CD and administrative staff. Each site visit results in the completion of an electronic site visit
form (Appendix H). The chairs document the important features of the core clerkship including the
strengths and weaknesses of the program, feedback to the clerkship directors and suggestions for
the future.
Along with the administrative staff at the affiliated hospitals and the Dean of Students Office,
additional University personnel are available at all times through the Office of Clinical Studies to help
improve the quality of life beyond the hospital environment. These include problems involving
finances, housing, visas and access to medical care.
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C.
The teaching cornerstone of the core rotation is the close relationship between the student and the
attending physicians and/or residents who act as preceptors. Many hours per week are spent in
small group discussions involving students and their clinical teachers as they make bedside rounds.
Together, they discuss the patients diagnosis, treatment and progress.
Discussion revolves around a critical review of the patients history, physical examination findings,
imaging studies and laboratory results. The preceptor evaluates the students oral presentations,
reviews the chart work and, most of all, serves as a role model. Related basic science background,
clinical skills and problem solving are woven into the discussion of the particular case. The single
most important factor that determines the educational value of the core rotation is the quality and
quantity of interaction between students, residents, teaching physicians and patients.
Clinical teachers are evaluated by the SGU CD, by their peers and by students on a daily basis. The
basis for student evaluation of faculty is the confidential electronic questionnaire that all students
complete at the end of each core clerkship. The hospital DME, SGU Department Chairs and SGU
administration have access to the students responses which are all confidential.
The basis for senior faculty evaluation is the on-going process required by post-graduate
accreditation agencies which includes peer review. Informal word of mouth local knowledge of
faculty, although difficult to formalize, forms an integral part of faculty evaluation. Written reports
of site visits by School of Medicine Chairs and Deans add a third level of evaluation.
In summary, the DME is responsible to assure that:
1. The faculty teaching the St. Georges students is of high quality.
2. The faculty teaching the St. Georges students at each hospital is evaluated appropriately.
3. Feedback to the faculty is timely.
D.
Medical students are called clinical clerks in their clinical years. They enter into the hierarchy of
interns, residents, fellows, attending physicians, nurses, technicians and other health care providers
and should quickly learn their role in the health care team.
The essence of the clinical core rotation consists of in-depth contact with patients; students are
strongly encouraged to make the most of such opportunities. Students take histories, examine the
patient, propose diagnostic and therapeutic plans, record their findings, present cases to the team,
perform minor procedures under supervision, attend all scheduled lectures and conferences, make
work rounds and teaching rounds with their peers and teachers, maintain a patient log and should
then read extensively about their patients diseases. In surgery and gynecology, attendance in the
operating room is required. In obstetrics, attendance is mandatory in prenatal and postpartum
clinics; patients must be followed through labor and delivery.
- 15 -
A physician, nurse or other health care provider must be present in the room as a chaperone when
students examine patients. This is especially true for examinations of the breasts, genitalia or
rectum. If a student writes orders in the chart, the orders must be authorized and countersigned by a
physician. Minor procedures may be performed on patients after adequate instruction has been
given and written certification documented in the Logbook of Manual Skills as permitted by hospital
policy and governmental regulations. Students working in hospitals are protected by liability
insurance which is carried by SGU. Students must soon become familiar with the anatomy of the
patients chart and know where to locate its individual components. Students are responsible for
written patient workups but might also write daily progress notes.
Clinical clerks are expected to be on duty throughout the hospital workday, Monday through Friday.
Evening, weekend, and holiday on-call schedules are the same as those for the resident team to
which the student is assigned. Student duty hours are set taking into account the effects of fatigue
and sleep deprivation on students education. In general, medical students are not required to work
longer hours than residents. Allowing for some modifications at different hospitals and for different
cores, the average workday consists of work rounds, teaching rounds, presentation of new patients
and data review in the morning, a conference at noon, and the performance of procedures, workups
on newly-admitted patients and additional conferences in the afternoon. Cores with operating room
experiences may be structured differently.
All students during the last week of their medicine and surgery cores are to be given at least two days
off before their NBME clinical subject exam as well as the day of the exam. All students during their
last week of ob/gyn, pediatrics and psychiatry cores are to be given at least one day off before the
exam as well as the day of the exam. These days are protected academic time for self-study and
exam preparation and considered and integral part of the core rotation. While all clerkship directors
must comply with this policy, they do have the option of allowing additional time off for study.
E.
The clinical years of the SGU curriculum aim to transform students who have learned the basic
sciences into students who can deal with patients and their problems in a hospital or outpatient
milieu. To do this, numerous new clinical skills, professional behaviors and considerable medical
knowledge must be added to that which the student has previously acquired. The clinical years in this
way prepare students for post graduate training.
Medical knowledge is of two types factual and conceptual. The vast amount of knowledge required
and the ever accelerating rate of discovery reinforces the notion that the practicing physician must
forever be a student of medicine and a continual learner. Conceptual knowledge includes the
development of efficient methods for the acquisition, interpretation and recording of patient
information and a systematic approach to patient care. This provides a framework on which to
arrange rapidly changing and increasingly detailed medical information.
SGU is committed to a competency based curriculum. These competencies are detailed in Section
Two. Those students who plan to undertake post-graduate training in the US should become familiar
with the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Core Competencies.
- 16 -
Students are encouraged to make the most of the opportunity to learn about, learn from and spend
time with their patients. A student frequently becomes involved with a small group of patients, on
the average of 2-4 per week. Indeed, the student often spends more time with the patient than does
the resident or attending, establishes rapport, gains the patients confidence and might be in the
best position to advise, comfort, give solace, explain and answer the patients questions.
Only through a detailed approach to a small number of patients can the student begin to acquire an
understanding of clinical problems. In addition to the initial work-up and daily progress notes, all
diagnostic and therapeutic maneuvers are closely monitored. Although a smaller group of patients
are the core of the students educational experience, exposure to a large number of other patients
on a less detailed basis is also useful in broadening knowledge. The student derives considerable
benefit from exposure to other students patients who are being discussed and by being present
when attendings or consultants see their own patients. Patients seen by students must be entered
into the electronic patient log book (see below). At the mid-core formative assessment and the endof-core summative oral exam the faculty reviews the log. This review assesses the quantity and
quality of patient involvement the student has experienced and the students commitment to
documentation. These patients form the basis of discussions with the resident and attending and for
the oral examination at the end of the clerkship. They establish the major subject matter for the
students reading. If their patients require surgery, students should assist or be present in the
operating room.
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Access Instructions:
To Register for MedU:
Go to www.med-u.org => "Register" at the top right-hand corner => Institutional Subscribers. The
iInTime Virtual Patient Cases Registration page opens. Provide your personal information in the
prompts. Important: use your SGU email address.
b. USMLEWorld:
During the first week of your first clerkship you will receive an email from USMLE World with
instructions on how to access the question bank. Students must complete all the questions in
Ob/Gyn, Pediatrics, Psychiatry and Surgery and a minimum of 400 questions in Internal
Medicine during corresponding clerkship.
The questions are separated into subjects as follows:
Subject
Number of questions
Internal Medicine
1416
Ob/Gyn
205
Pediatrics
304
Psychiatry
150
Surgery
155
c. Communication Skills Course
This course consists of 41 modules and is split between two Sakai Communication Courses.
Students starting clinical training must study and pass the first web-based modules 1-12 in the
Communication Skills course A to be eligible for clinical placement. The second Communication
Skills course B begins when you start your first rotation. Each clinical department has
designated modules to be an integral and required part of their rotation. Students will study
the rest of the modules throughout their clinical training, particularly as it relates to patients
they see. Completing this course is a requirement for graduation.
d. Cultural Competency Course - This is a pre-placement course designed to help you become
more aware of the ways culture may affect your interaction with patients.
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e. Sakai Courses
Sakai is the Universitys on-line course management software system. Each core clerkship as
well as family medicine and emergency medicine have a corresponding web-based course
which students must complete. Students must pass course quizzes with an 80% or higher.
f. Overview of Web-based Courses
The details of the pre-clerkship requirements are found in this manual under I.c. Each of the
clerkship requirements are included in the curriculum of each clerkship in IV.
Pre-clerkship placement requirements
1. Communication skills
2. Emergency medicine
3. Infection control
4. Cultural Competency
Clerkship requirements (details found in section IV. THE CORE CLERKSHIPS)
Each clerkship has required web based courses which students must complete. These courses
fall into three groups:
1. Communication skill modules
2. UWorld questions (not in family medicine)
3. Sakai courses.
The Sakai courses consist of
a. a clerkship specific course
b. a new radiology course called CORE ( Case-based Online Radiology Education) (not
in psychiatry)
c. new assignments in ethics
d. new assignments in geriatrics
Graduation requirements
1. Pain Management Sakai Course
2. Remainder of Communication Skills Modules
3. Completion of the Geriatrics Sakai Course
H. Electronic Patient Encounter Log
All students must keep a daily electronic log of the patients encountered during their core
clerkships. This log is web-based and accessed through My SGU (details below). The log has nine
fields that students must complete for each patient encounter: rotation, hospital, date, chief
complaint, primary diagnosis, secondary diagnoses, clinical setting, level of responsibility and
category of illness. The log also has a comment section. Students can use the comment section to
note relevant Communication Skills Modules, cultural issues, procedures or medical literature
relevant to the patient. We recommend that the log be kept current on a daily basis. This log serves
multiple functions and, as discussed below, will be used in different ways and for different purposes
by students, by the clinical faculty at affiliated hospitals and by the Office of the Dean.
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Rationale
During the clinical years students need to develop the clinical competencies required for graduation
and postgraduate training. These competencies are assessed in many different ways: by faculty
observation during rotations, by oral examinations, by written examinations and by the USMLE Step
2 examinations (CK & CS) or the schools final examinations. In order to develop many of these
competencies and meet the objectives required for graduation, the school needs to ensure that each
student sees enough patients and an appropriate mix of patients during their clinical terms. For these
reasons, as well as others discussed, below the school has developed this log.
One of the competencies that students must develop during their clinical training involves
documentation. Documentation is an essential and important feature of patient care and learning
how and what to document is an important part of medical education. Keeping this log becomes a
student training exercise in documentation. The seriousness and accuracy with which students
maintain and update their patient log will be part of their assessment during the core rotations. In
terms of the log, how will students be assessed? Not by the number of diagnoses they log, but by
the conscientiousness and honesty they exhibit documenting their patient encounters. All of these
features of documentation seriousness, accuracy, conscientiousness and honesty are measures of
professional behavior.
Definition of a patient encounter
Students should log only an encounter with or exposure to a real patient. Simulated patients, case
presentations, videos, grand rounds, written clinical vignettes, etc. should not be logged even though
they are all important ways to learn clinical medicine. Many of these educational experiences, along
with self-directed reading, are necessary preparation for Step 2 and postgraduate training. This log,
however, focuses on a unique and critical component of clinical training, namely, involvement with
real patients. Student involvement with patients can occur in various ways with different levels of
student responsibility. The most meaningful learning experience involves the student in the initial
history and physical exam and participation in diagnostic decision making and management. A less
involved but still meaningful encounter can be seeing a patient presented by someone else at the
bedside. Although the level of responsibility in this latter case is less, students should log the
diagnoses seen in these clinical encounters. Patient experiences in the operating or delivery room
should also be logged.
For students
A. The lists of symptoms (chief complaints) and diagnoses serve as guidelines for the types of
patients the clinical faculty think students should see over two years of clinical training. We
feel that students should have clinical exposure to about 50 symptoms (chief complaints) and
about 180 diagnostic entities. These lists can also serve as the basis for self-directed learning
and independent study in two ways:
1. If students see a patient and enter that patients primary and secondary diagnoses in the
log, they will be expected to be more knowledgeable about these clinical entities and to do
additional reading about them, including some research or review articles. If relevant,
students can study and log a communication skills module.
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2. If, at the end of the third year, students discover they have not seen some of the clinical
entities on the list during the core rotations, they can arrange to see these problems in the
fourth year or learn about them in other ways on their own.
B. The different fields in the log should stimulate students to look for and document the
complexities of clinical encounters when appropriate. Many patients present with multiple
medical problems. For example, an elderly patient admitted with pneumonia (primary
diagnosis) may also have chronic lung disease, hypertension and depression (secondary
diagnoses). The patient may have fears about death that need to be discussed. We hope by
keeping the log students will develop a more profound understanding of many patient
encounters.
C. Students may, and many times should, review and edit the log (see Instructions to access
and use the log below). The original entry might require additions if, for example a new
diagnosis is discovered, the patient moves from the ED to the OR to the wards or a patient
presenting with an acute condition deteriorates and raises end-of-life issues. These
developments require a return to the original entry for editing.
D. The chief complaint and diagnosis lists do not include every possible diagnosis or even every
diagnostic entity students must learn about. The list reflects the common and typical clinical
entities that the faculty feels SGU students should experience. The same list of diagnoses is
presented in two ways - alphabetically and by specialty. Both lists contain the same diagnoses
and students can use whichever one is easier. If students encounter a diagnosis not on the
list, they should choose the most related diagnosis from the list. By looking at standard
diagnoses, the school can monitor the overall clinical experiences students are having at
different affiliated hospitals.
E. Students must learn more than they will experience during clinical rotations. The log does not
reflect the totality of the educational objectives during the core clerkships. Clinical experience
is an important part, but only a part, of your clerkship requirements. Students need to
commit themselves to the extensive reading and studying during the clinical years. Read
about patients you see and read about patients you dont see
F. The oral exam includes other components in addition to the review and evaluation of the logs.
G. The NBME Clinical Subject Exams at the end of the clerkship is not based on the log but on
topics chosen by the NBME.
H. We encourage students to maintain this log throughout their 80 weeks of clinical training.
The University requires that the logs be formally evaluated only during the core clerkships.
However, the list reflects those entities the faculty thinks students should encounter during
their entire clinical experience in medical school, not just during the core clerkships. Other
rotations may decide to use the log and should notify students if they intend to do this.
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Assessment
1. Hospital Oversight
A clerkship director or faculty member reviews and assesses students printout of their logs as part of
the mid-core assessment and end-of-core oral exam. During the mid-core formative evaluation the
faculty member can comment on the completeness of the log and also ascertain whether
students are seeing a good mix of patients. During the end-of-clerkship oral summative exam, the
examiner should again review the log for thoroughness. Students with relatively insufficient entries
were either not involved in the rotation or did not take the log assignment seriously. Since
students are responsible to answer questions about the entries in their log, we would not expect
students to log cases they have not seen and studied. The clinical faculty and departments can use
the collective data in the students logs to evaluate their own program and the extent it offers
students an appropriate clinical experience.
2. Central Oversight
Because of its web-based structure, all entries into the log are electronically submitted to the school
and available for review on the schools server. The Office of the Dean collects, collates and analyzes
logs from all of the students. The Office of the Dean uses this data in two ways:
a. This information is used to monitor and evaluate the clinical experience at different hospitals.
In this way, the central administration of the school will be able to answer questions, for
example, like Have all of our students seen appendicitis? Have they all seen a patient with
schizophrenia? Do all of our affiliated hospitals expose our students to end-of-life issues? Are
all students involved in communication with children and parents? With the data from these
logs we can document for ourselves, the faculty and the student body that all of our clinical
training sites provide excellent and comparable clinical experiences.
b. Beginning in November, 2014 the School of Medicine will utilize a software program it has
recently developed. This program reviews the patient log of every clinical student that has
completed their clerkship years. Students who have gaps in their clinical experience can be
identified. This has been made possible by asking each of the clinical departments to provide
quantified criteria for the types of patients students must see. The Office of Clinical Studies will
then notify students identified in this way and point out the deficiencies in their clinical
experience. Students will then be asked to remediate this deficiency. Students can do this by
scheduling an appropriate 4th year elective, by additional reading or by completing a webbased assignment.
Instructions to students for access and use of the logs
To access your electronic patient log, click My SGU on the main SGU website page, www.sgu.edu,
and log onto the SGU Members center. The link to the Patient Encounter Log is found in the SOM
Clinical Studies section. Clicking this link will take you to the Patient Encounter Log Main Menu.
From this menu, you can perform the following actions:
Enter a new patient encounter
Review or Edit my encounter logs
Print my logs
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When you select Enter a new patient encounter, you will see pull down selections for all of the fields
except Comments. Make your selections and click Submit My Log. Entry in all of the fields is
required.
The main menu selection Review or Edit your encounter logs will take you to a screen which lists all
of your logs. Select the one youd like to see or change. The Edit This Log button will allow you to
make changes to the individual log.
Select print your logs from the menu to prepare a printer-friendly formatted table of your logs.
Select the logs to include for printing, and click Print Selected Logs. On the next page, click Print this
Page to receive your output. Bring this printed record to the mid-core evaluation and end-of-core
oral exam.
I. Communication Skills
The basic science and clinical faculty at SGUSOM have identified competency in communication as a
critical clinical skill that students must develop during medical school. As part of our educational
program, communication skills are a major outcome objective that defines a graduate of SGU. In
addition, both the US Department of Education and the Caribbean Accreditation Authority for
Education in Medicine (CAAM) require formal training in communication skills throughout medical
school. Lastly, USMLE Step 2 CS is, to a great extent, a measure of communication skills.
Formal training of communication skills starts in the basic science terms. On clinical rotations
extensive but informal exposure to communication skills occurs as students listen to residents and
senior physicians. While this educational experience has major advantages, it lacks structure and
thoroughness, is difficult to evaluate and does not meet accreditation requirements.
To address this problem, the school has purchased a library subscription to a web-based
communication skills course developed by Drexel University College of Medicine called doc.com: an
interactive learning resource for healthcare communication. This course is available to all students
at no cost and can be accessed through MY SGU under MD program / MD Clinical Studies. This
course and the related exam (discussed below) will be the basis of formal communication skills
training for medical students during their clinical years. The course consists of 42 modules. Students
starting clinical training must study and pass a web-based exam on modules 1-12 to be eligible for
clinical placement. Students should study the rest of the modules throughout their clinical training,
particularly, as it relates to patients they see. In addition, each of the clinical departments has
designated the following modules to be an integral part of their rotation:
Medicine Modules 23 The Geriatric Interview, 24 Tobacco Intervention
Surgery Modules 17 Informed Decision-Making & 35 Discussing Medical Error
Psychiatry Modules 13 Responding to Strong Emotions & 15Cultural issues In the Interview
Pediatrics Modules 21 Communication and Relationships with Children and Parents & 22 The
Adolescent Interview
Ob/Gyn Modules 18 Exploring Sexual Issues & 28 Domestic Violence
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L. Senior Year
This portion of the clinical program has four main goals:
1. To broaden and deepen clinical education after the core rotations
2. To continue core experience at a higher level involving more responsibility
3. To establish clinical competence within the training standards of an approved residency
program in order to facilitate acceptance into a post-graduate training program
4. To choose a group of electives that best serves the academic needs of the student and is
suitable for the students career choice
Subinternships and electives at clinical centers or other affiliated hospitals with appropriately related
postgraduate programs can be arranged by the Office of Clinical Studies or by the DME at any
hospital.
Many electives are offered by clinical centers and affiliated hospitals; these can be found on the
Official Clinical Website under New Announcements. A spreadsheet called Elective Opportunities at
SGU Affiliated Hospitals allows students to look for electives by hospital and/or specialty. As a
general rule, all electives should be at least four weeks long. Family medicine may be taken at any
hospital either within or outside the SGU network; the student makes that arrangement. In clinical
centers and affiliated hospitals, placement in electives is made by the DME. Elective rotations must
be taken only on services that are part of a post-graduate training program in the specific area.
Electives in subspecialty areas such as cardiology or neonatology require the presence of an
approved postgraduate training program either in that subspecialty or the parent specialty such as
medicine or pediatrics.
University policy allows students to enroll in up to twelve weeks of elective rotations in out of
network hospitals, but no more than 8 weeks or 2 rotations at a single site. In every instance in
which a student seeks to take an elective outside the SGU network, prior written approval must be
obtained from the Dean of the School of Medicine, and a single elective affiliation agreement must
be signed by the hospital (Appendix D). Special elective requests beyond these guidelines also
require prior approval by the Dean. No credit will be granted retroactively if approval is not obtained
beforehand.
Licensure requirements in the US vary from state to state and from year to year. A few states
currently do not accept clinical training in hospitals that are not part of the SGU network.
Accordingly, students who do not yet know where they will seek licensure to practice medicine and
who wish to be eligible anywhere should avoid electives at unaffiliated hospitals. Students who
know their destination should verify the licensure laws and regulations in this regard with the specific
national or state licensing agency. Those who wish to practice medicine outside the US should
verify the licensure requirements of the relevant country.
SGU medical malpractice insurance policy covers its students in healthcare facilities throughout the
US, UK, Canada and the Caribbean. Other jurisdictions are available on an individual basis by
application.
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Nondiscrimination
It is unethical for a student to refuse to participate in the care of a person based on race,
religion, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, gender, age or sexual preference. It is also unethical to
refuse to participate in the care of a patient solely because of medical risk, or perceived risk, to
the student. It is not, however, unethical for the pregnant student to refuse to participate in
activities that pose a significant risk to her fetus.
2. Confidentiality
The patients right to the confidentiality of his or her medical record is a fundamental tenet of
medical care. The discussion of problems or diagnoses of a patient by professional staff
staff/medical students in public violates patient confidentiality and is unethical. Under no
circumstances can any medical record be removed from the institution nor is photocopying of
the record permitted. For presentations or rounds, students are permitted to extract
information but not copy wholesale parts of the chart.
3. Professional Demeanor
The student should be thoughtful and professional when interacting with patients and their
families. Inappropriate behavior includes the use of offensive language, gestures or remarks with
sexual overtones.
4.
Students should maintain a neat and clean appearance and dress in attire that is generally
accepted as professional by the patient population served. Under pressure of fatigue,
professional stress or personal problems, students should strive to maintain composure. The
student should seek supportive services when appropriate.
Misrepresentation
A student must accurately represent herself or himself to patients and others on the medical
team. Students must never introduce themselves as "Doctor" as this is clearly a
misrepresentation of the students position, knowledge and authority.
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5.
6.
7.
Honesty
Students are expected to demonstrate honesty and integrity in all aspects of their education and
in their interactions with patients, staff, faculty and colleagues. They may not cheat, plagiarize or
assist others in the commission of these acts. The student must assure the accuracy and
completeness of his or her part of the medical record and must make a good-faith effort to
provide the best possible patient care. Students must be willing to admit errors and not
knowingly mislead others or promote himself or herself at the patients expense. The student is
bound to know, understand and preserve professional ethics and has a duty to report any
breach of these ethics by other students or health care providers through the appropriate
channels. The student should understand the protocol of these channels.
Consultation
Students should seek consultation and supervision whenever their care of a patient may be
inadequate because of lack of knowledge and/or experience.
Conflict of Interests
When a conflict of interest arises the welfare of the patient must at all times be paramount. A
student may challenge or refuse to comply with a directive if its implementation would be
antithetical to his or her own ethical principles when such action does not compromise patient
welfare.
the community. The medical student will deal with professional, staff and peer members of the
health team in a cooperative and considerate manner.
11. Research
The basic principle underlying all research is honesty. Scientists have a responsibility to provide
research results of high quality, to gather facts meticulously, to keep impeccable records of work
done, to interpret results realistically, not forcing them into preconceived molds or models and
to report new knowledge through appropriate channels. Co-authors of research reports must be
well-enough acquainted with the work of their co-workers that they can personally vouch for
the integrity of the study and validity of the findings and must have been active in the research
itself.
Plagiarism is unethical. To consciously incorporate the words of others, either verbatim or
through paraphrasing, without appropriate acknowledgement is unacceptable in scientific
literature.
12. Evaluation
Students should seek feedback and actively participate in the process of evaluating their
teachers (faculty as well as house staff). Students are expected to respond to constructive
criticism by appropriate modification of their behavior.
When evaluating faculty performance, students are obliged to provide prompt, constructive
comments. Evaluations may not include disparaging remarks, offensive language or personal
attacks, and should maintain the same considerate, professional tone expected of faculty
when they evaluate student performance.
13. Teaching
The very title "Doctor" (from the Latin docere, "to teach") implies a responsibility to share
knowledge and information with colleagues and patients. It is incumbent upon those entering
this profession to teach what they know of the science, art, and ethics of medicine. It includes
communicating clearly with and teaching patients so that they are properly prepared to
participate in their own care and in the maintenance of their health.
The following are not specific responsibilities of students; they are physicians responsibilities,
although students are frequently asked to take these on.
14. Disclosure
In general, full disclosure is a fundamental ethical requirement. The patient must be well
Informed to make health care decisions and work intelligently in partnership with the
medical team. Information that the patient needs for decision making should be presented in
terms the patient can understand. If the patient is unable to comprehend, for some reason, there
should be full disclosure to the patients authorized representative.
15. Informed Consent
Students are to understand the importance of the obligation to obtain informed consent form
patients but are not responsible for obtaining such consent. Its the physicians responsibility to
ensure that the patient or his/her surrogate be appropriately informed as to the nature of the
patients medical condition, the objectives of proposed treatment alternatives and any risks
involved. The physicians presentation should be understandable and unbiased. The patients or
surrogates concurrence must be obtained without coercion.
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Patients Rights
The patient has a right to know
who the provider of care is.
Behavioral Examples
Unless told otherwise, the
patient will assume the
provider is a physician.
- 31 -
rotation for the designated number of weeks. From a legal and regulatory point of view, a week
is defined as five full days. If students travel to interviews and miss several days of the rotation,
asking that the evaluation form attest to a full rotation without making up that time would be
fraudulent. Any days off or lost clinical time from rotations must be made up by utilizing
additional on call or weekend time at the discretion of the clerkship director. Educational
projects, such as a research assignment and/or presentation of a topic, could also be used by
the clerkship director to make up time away from the rotation. No time off is permitted during
sub-internships.
Students are advised to arrange for a 4 week LOA or bridge time to attend many or all residency
interviews. However, not every student can afford the time off. Students are encouraged to look at
their clinical calendar (see the OCGSD website under 3rd year) to see if they can take the time off
without jeopardizing their graduation timeline. Students who cannot take any time off should try to
plan their interview season so that interviews are dispersed among the four months of "interview
season," if possible. Any questions about this policy should be referred to the students' OCGSD
advisors.
b. Details
ELECTIVES:
Student must give hospital and the Office of Clinical Studies 12 week notification
If less than twelve weeks
Students will be responsible for hospital fees for cancelled elective rotation
Students will receive letter of reprimand from the Dean, SOM for unprofessional behavior
Student must write a letter of apology to hospital
Second cancellation
May lead to suspension from the school and mention of suspension in the students MSPE
SUBINTERNSHIPS:
Cancellation NOT ALLOWED
If student cancels
o Student is responsible for full tuition for the cancelled rotation
o Student will not receive credit for an elective for that same time period
HOSPITALS:
Should not cancel electives
Student should notify the Office of Clinical Studies if hospital cancels
APPEALS:
ONLY FOR SERIOUS REASONS
US students send appeal to Dr. Laurence Dopkin at ldopkin@sgu.edu
UK students send appeal to Mr. Rodney Croft at rcroft@sgu.edu
OUT OF NETWORK:
Students waiting for confirmation should leave that period unscheduled until they are
confirmed by the hospital
- 33 -
- 34 -
IV.
- 35 -
not contain the Summary section of the MSPE because this section is not finalized until shortly before
transmission to ERAS and is subject to ongoing modification thereafter at the discretion of the MSPE
Coordinator.
Students can obtain a more complete student copy of their MSPE after graduation. Interim student
copies are not made available because the Summary section is not ultimately finalized until that
time. This prevents possible multiple versions with varying ELs from being in circulation.
MSPEs are uploaded to ERAS and are emailed in PDF format to other matching services, e.g. the
Canadian Residency Application Service (CaRMs) or the San Francisco Match in late summer-early
fall. Only one MSPE is required per matching service. With regard to applying to individual programs
that do not participate in the matching services, MSPEs are emailed in PDF format. Hard copies can
be sent via US Mail if necessary. Students must provide detailed contact information for all programs,
including contact name, title, hospital name, hospital address, email address.
MSPE Coordinators are also responsible for sending transcripts for residency applications. Official
transcripts are generally sent via email in PDF format. If this is not possible for some reason, hard
copies can be sent via US Mail.
Fees for MSPEs and transcripts are as follows:
MSPEs, regardless of whether they are official, review, or student copies, are free of charge.
Official transcripts are $5.00 each for the first 10 and $3.00 each thereafter, per request (only
1 is needed for each matching service).
Student copy transcripts can be obtained at no charge from the Registrars Office
Further details regarding the MSPE process can be found in the MSPE section of the Clinical Dept
area of the SGU website.
C.
While in their clinical training, students should contact the DME at their clinical center or hospital for
any acute healthcare problem. These include medical illnesses, psychological problems, needle stick
or mucous membrane exposure to a patients blood or body fluid, exposure to a patient with
tuberculosis etc. The Office of Clinical Studies should also be notified and will help students with
both acute and long term care.
Students are encouraged to approach any member of the Universitys faculty or administration with
any medical, psychological or substance abuse problem. Such problems coming to the attention of a
clinical faculty member should be referred to the relevant dean. Any dean or department chair is
available during site visits to discuss personal questions or problems. Members of the SGUSOM
administration can be contacted any time by email.
In the UK, a special psychological counseling service is available for SGU students on a 24-hour basis.
If necessary, a meeting with a student can be arranged. Counseling is usually initiated by the student
or occasionally by a dean.
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The issue of student health care while in hospitals requires further clarification. Students rotating
through hospitals are not employees and should not have access to employee or occupational health
services. They are not covered under Workmans Compensation Laws. Whenever possible, students
with an injury, illness or other health related problems should see a private physician in their health
plan.
Students are not to use the Emergency Department for routine problems. Students are responsible
for all fees that are charged by the ED, physicians and hospital that are not covered by their health
plan. Insurance policies may not cover non-emergency illnesses or injuries treated in the hospital ED
and/or may require a co-payment. Only serious, acute problems should necessitate an ED visit.
Needle-stick incidents may require an ED visit depending on hospital policy.
D.
All clinical centers and affiliated hospitals provide information about access to food and housing.
Food and housing vary from site to site but remain the students responsibility. Advice about housing
in Miami can be obtained from the University (sguhouse@sgu.edu). Information about hospitals
housing, parking permits, meal tickets and similar local issues are provided by the hospitals medical
education coordinators who assist SGU students at clinical centers and affiliated hospitals. A listing of
hospitals offering meal tickets and parking permits can be found on the official clinical website.
Departing students and the student coordinators at each hospital provide listings of available
housing, which is helpful to the students. Students are responsible for their own transportation to
and from their hospital.
E.
Financial Services
Questions about student accounts and billing are handled at the Office of Student Finances.
Information about scholarships or loans, counseling for financial planning, budgeting and debt
management are provided by the Office of Financial Aid. Both offices are located at University
Support Services, LLC, 3500 Sunrise Highway, Building 300, Great River, New York 11739. The phone
numbers are: 631-665-8500, or 1-800-899-6337.
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SECTION TWO
I. ACHIEVING COMPETENCE
A. Introduction
Section Two describes the requirements that form the foundation of the clinical undergraduate
years (terms 6-10). These include the five core rotations, a family medicine practice rotation and a
medicine subinternship. The basic science years primarily require students to learn facts and
concepts. The clinical years add a new dimension to the educational process. While students must
continue to acquire new knowledge, they must also develop the clinical skills and professional
behaviors needed to apply that knowledge to real-life care of patients or, in other words, to become
clinically competent. In addition, medical knowledge, clinical skills and professional behaviors need
to be integrated with the practical realities of the current health care delivery system. The
successful passage of students through this learning process will enable them to transition to
postgraduate trainee, independent practitioner and life long learner.
B. Active Learning, Independent Study and Student Portfolio
In order to become life-long learners, students must develop skills for self-directed learning, an
essential task of medical student education. Before starting a clerkship, a student should ask and
be able to answer the questions, What should I learn in this clerkship? and How will I learn
it? In general, the answers to these questions will be found in multiple domains: medical
knowledge, clinical skills and professional behaviors. Knowledge will be acquired during didactic
activities, such as general and patient-specific reading, lectures, conferences, etc. To guide
students, this section provides lists of specific core topics that should be learned during the
clerkships and web-based educational programs that students must complete.
In addition, students must maintain an electronic patient encounter log containing lists of symptoms
and diseases that the faculty feels students should become familiar with. Students must also
recognize different categories of diseases. These include the important aspects of preventive,
emergency, acute, chronic, continuing, rehabilitative and end-of-life care. Clinical skills and
professional behaviors will be developed during supervised and observed patient encounters and
during interaction with senior physicians, everywhere that care is delivered. Measurement of the
students knowledge, skills and professional behavior against defined benchmarks determines the
students progress through the academic program. Importantly, the patients that students see and
document in the patient log should form the basis for active and independent learning. In this
patient-centered process students should develop the ability to independently identify, analyze and
synthesize relevant information. Students should also strive to critically appraise the credibility of
information sources they use. These competencies will be evaluated during discussions about
patients at the bedside and in conferences and as part of students write-ups. Each students log
becomes part of each students portfolio evaluated during the end of clerkship oral exam.
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Each of the core clerkships have three web-based courses and quizzes that students must complete
during the rotation. The courses consist of:
1. The required modules in the Communication Skills Course
2. Assigned questions in USMLE World (not required for FM)
3. Specialty specific courses and quizzes will be accessed through my courses in Sakai
(SIMPLE, SGU Psychiatry Course, CLIPP, UWise, WiseMD and fmCASES). After completing
each of these courses and exams, the student generates a grade sheet. These grade
sheets are added to each students portfolio along with the electronic patient log to be
evaluated at the end of clerkship oral exam. (see appendix).
The web-based courses will promote independent study and deepen students understanding of the
clerkship. In addition, these courses will also help students prepare for USMLE Step 2.
C. Competency
The US Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) defines six domains thought
to be useful in defining competency; these are called the core competencies - patient care,
medical knowledge, practice-based learning and improvement, professionalism, systems-based
practice, and interpersonal skills and communication. While these were initially developed for
application to residency programs, in the US today competencies are used at many levels of
professional practice to define and measure an individuals ability and capability. Medical schools
use competency to determine suitability for graduation; residency programs use competency to
certify suitability for completion and healthcare institutions use competency to determine eligibility
for clinical privileges. The emphasis on achieving and demonstrating competency, a more easily
quantifiable and reliable measure, replaces a more traditional model. The traditional model judges
students along a qualitative continuum generally using words like excellent, good, needs
improvement or letter grades. It is thought that the more descriptive and quantifiable an
assessment method, the more valid and reliable it is.
In order to ensure that every graduate of SGUSOM is able to function at the highest possible
professional level, it is necessary for us to define exactly what we mean by competent.
Multiple models have been used to accomplish this. SGUSOM groups its competencies, or outcome
objectives, into three domains medical knowledge, clinical skills and professional behavior. The
outcome objectives presented below provide an overarching guide to the individual clinical
departments.
In the following pages, seven clinical departments describe the training tasks that students undertake
as they rotate through the different clerkships. It is through these tasks that students develop the
competencies required by each specialty and, ultimately, required by the school for graduation.
Students should become aware of the similarities and differences between the different clerkships.
While medical knowledge and aspects of clinical skills differ from specialty to specialty, certainly
professional behavior, interpersonal skills and communication are universal.
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k. Identify individuals at risk for disease and select appropriate preventive measures.
l. Recognize life threatening emergencies and initiate appropriate primary intervention.
m. Outline the management plan for patients under the following categories of care:
preventive, acute, chronic, emergency, end of life, continuing and rehabilitative.
n. Continually reevaluate management plans based on the progress of the patients
condition and appraisal of current scientific evidence and medical information.
C. Professional Behavior
a. Establish rapport and exhibit compassion for patients and families and respect their
privacy, dignity and confidentiality.
b. Demonstrate honesty, respect and integrity in interacting with patients and their families,
colleagues, faculty and other members of the health care team.
c. Be responsible in tasks dealing with patient care, faculty and colleagues including
healthcare documentation.
d. Demonstrate sensitivity to issues related to culture, race, age, gender, religion, sexual
orientation and disability in the delivery of health care.
e. Demonstrate a commitment to high professional and ethical standards.
f. React appropriately to difficult situations involving conflicts, nonadherence and ethical
dilemmas.
g. Demonstrate a commitment to independent and life long learning including evaluating
research in healthcare.
h. Demonstrate the willingness to be an effective team member and team leader in the
delivery of health care.
i. Recognize ones own limitations in knowledge, skills and attitudes and the need for asking
for additional consultation.
j. Participate in activities to improve the quality of medical education, including evaluations
of courses and clerkships.
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The following are a few examples for determining the final grade based on the above list.
Four As and an A+ on the NBME = A+ (Honors)
Four As and a B on the NBME = A
Four As and a C- on the NBME = B
Four Bs and an A on the NBME = B
Four Bs and a C- on the NBME = B
For other combinations clerkship directors can use their judgment in determining the final grade. The
NBME clinical subject exam grade is only 20% of the grade and no more.
We expect that about 60% of our students will get an A, about 30% a B and about 5-10% honors. Cs
and Fs are rare. These percentages characterize the grade distribution for the entire clinical student
body and should not be used to determine grades for each group of students on an individual
rotation. However, the school is required to monitor the grade distribution for each clerkship at each
hospital over the course of a year and expects the grade distribution to reflect the above.
2. Definitions of Grades
A+ (honors) requires all As and an A+ on the NBME exam. A+ (honors) must be given to students
with these grades. The number of students who receive an A+ on the NBME can not exceed
10% for statistical reasons. Therefore, A+ (honors) grade is not subject to grade inflation.
A is given to students who proficiently develop the competencies listed in the Clinical Training
Manual and whose overall performance is good.
B is given to those students who only adequately develop the required competencies and whose
overall performance is acceptable.
C is given to those students who barely meet minimum requirements. This grade is, in fact, a
warning grade and identifies a student who is struggling in medical school and may need
remedial work or counseling.
F is given to those students whose continuation in medical school is problematic. An F in any
component of the assessment precludes a student from getting credit for the rotation until
remediation is successfully completed.
Clerkship Directors have the option of adding + or to the above grades based on their opinion. Only
A+ requires objective criteria.
In summary, grading of student performance should use the following:
A+ = exceptional
A = good
B = adequate
C = minimal
F = failing
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After the review of the patient log, the exam should proceed as a Step 2 CS exam.
i. The integrated clinical encounter (ICE). This is the classic exam. The examiner could
choose a case, from the students log for example, and ask the student to integrate the
history, physical findings, lab results, imaging studies, etc. into a reasonable discussion of
pathophysiology, differential diagnosis, further work-up and management, etc.
ii. Communication skills and interpersonal relationship (CS/IR). This is new and may require
some creativity and play-acting on the part of the examiner. (See appendix K for the NBME
approach to communication skills). Departments could develop a list of challenging
questions involving ethical issues, e.g., end-of-life decisions, informed consent, delivering
bad news, etc. Assessment here may be difficult and subjective. One way to look at this
would be for examiners to ask themselves If this was an interview, would I take this
student into my residency program? If the answer is negative, the school should be
notified in order to remediate the student. The exam form should have a section for such
comments. These students may be at high risk for a Step 2 CS failure and/or for not getting
a residency because of their lack of interviewing skills. To a certain extent, this can be a
formative as well as a summative exam.
c. NBME Exam Policies and Procedures
The NBME Clinical Subject (Shelf) Exam must be taken by all students toward the end
of the core rotation and determines 20% of the final grade. Scheduling for this exam is done by
Ms. Jennifer OHagan, Director of NBME Examinations, in the Office of The Dean of Clinical
Development. Students who test at our private site will be notified 2 weeks prior to their exam.
Students who test at Prometric Centers receive permits 3 weeks prior to each exam. Hospitals
must excuse students 1 day before the pediatrics, ob/gyn and psychiatry exams for study time,
2 days before the medicine and surgery exam for study time and for the entire day of the exam.
While the oral exam is based on the students clinical experience during the rotation, the
NBME exam is not. Instead this exam tests students understanding of the subject as, for
example, it might be presented in a textbook. Students can find the content of these exams on
the NBME website. Students must sit the NBME exam before starting their next rotation.
i. All students must attend the Oral Exam as scheduled. No excuses are permitted unless
approved by the clerkship director or DME.
ii. All students must attend the NBME exam as scheduled. With rare exception and only after
approval by a Dean, a student can take a separate SGU written exam.
iii. Students who are too ill to take the exam as scheduled should refer to the Medical
Excuse policy in the Student Manual.
iv. If for any reason a student misses an oral exam, a make-up exam must be scheduled
within 2 weeks with the clerkship director or DME. If for any reason a student misses
an NBME exam, a make-up exam must be scheduled within 2 weeks by contacting Ms.
Jennifer OHagan.
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will attend, and sometimes, present at conferences. This opportunity should be embraced and used
to improve your case presentation skills. You will be judged on your presentation ability for the rest
of your professional life.
Of course you will need to read on your cases. This should include a comprehensive review in a
standard textbook of Medicine as well as a thorough review of the pertinent literature to expand
your knowledge of the more unique characteristics of your specific case. Use of the on-line resources
such as the SIMPLE cases will also be valuable.
Your grade will depend on your clinical performance involving such factors as communication,
professionalism and humanism, as well as your oral and written examinations. The final written exam
is the NBME subject examination which is also taken by almost all U.S. medical students. It is a
generally accepted, psychometrically valid measure of your medical knowledge. I expect that with
sincere and diligent effort in all venues and at all times, students should expect to achieve a grade of
A. That means that there is no curve in the grading and a mature approach to this very demanding
course of study by graduate medical students should produce this result. You should regularly ask for
feedback from your instructors so that necessary mid course corrections can be made in a timely and
effective manner.
Please read the rest of the detailed description of this core rotation which follows this brief message.
I am proud that you have chosen medicine as a profession, and that with sincere effort you will be a
credit to our institution, to our profession and to yourselves. Good luck.
Description of the Core Clerkship in Internal Medicine
The Medicine rotation teaches a logical and humanistic approach to patients and their problems.
This process begins with a presenting complaint, through a comprehensive history and physical
examination, to the formulation of a problem list, assessment of the problems including a differential
diagnosis, a plan for definitive diagnosis and therapy, as well as an assessment of the patients
educational needs.
While this sequence is applicable to all specialties in the clinical years, Medicine carries the major
responsibility for teaching this clinical approach, thus forming the cornerstone of study in the clinical
terms, regardless of a students future interests.
These twelve weeks expose the student to a wide range of medical problems. Skills in processing and
presenting data to preceptors, peers and patients are assessed and refined. In addition, the clerkship
introduces system based practice, practice based learning and improvement and cultural sensitivity
and competency. The student learns the unique aspects of providing care for the elderly and those at
the end of life. This includes the special needs of the elderly regarding multiple medication
interactions, physical fragility and changes in cognition. The student learns interpersonal and
communication skills and how to relate to patients, families and all members of the health care team
in an ethical and professional manner.
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Students accomplish the goals of the clerkship by extensive contact with many patients,
conferences, lectures, bedside rounds and discussions with preceptors, residents and consultants,
write-ups, case presentations, review of laboratory work, x-rays and imaging procedures, web-based
educational programs as well as a prodigious amount of reading. The Department of Medicine places
special emphasis on developing student skills not only in history taking, physical examination and
written and oral case presentation, but also in understanding the pathophysiology of disease and in
developing a problem list and a differential diagnosis. Humanism in Medicine is stressed throughout
the clerkship as it will form an integral part of any physicians life.
2. GUIDELINES
i. Length: twelve weeks.
ii. Site: in-hospital medical services and out-patient facilities. Students may also rotate through
nursing homes, sub-acute nursing facilities or other similar places where healthcare is
delivered.
iii. Before the start of the clerkship students are required to access the corresponding online
Medicine course in Sakai. This course includes an introduction by the SGU Chair of
Medicine, the curriculum and web-based assignments.
iv. Orientation at the start of the clerkship: this should include an introduction to the key
faculty and coordinators, a tour of the facilities, distribution of schedules, discussion of
the expectations and responsibilities of the clerk, the general department and student
schedule and the assignment to residency teams and preceptors. Students should be
made aware of the contents of the CTM and the goals and expectations of the clerkship as a
comprehensive learning experience. The SGU Clerkship Director in Medicine and preceptors
are responsible to review and discuss the educational goals and objectives of the clerkship
set forth in this manual before each rotation. In addition there must be emphasis on
developing communication skills, discussion of manual skills requirements and discussion of
professional behavior.
v. Schedule: all day Monday through Friday; night, weekend and holiday call with residency
teams as assigned. Approximately 30% of the Clerkship should be allocated to protected
academic time for teaching conferences and structured independent study.
vi. Attending rounds for house staff and students at least three times per week.
vii. A full schedule of teaching conferences including grand rounds, subspecialty conferences and
didactic sessions pertinent to the needs of the students.
viii. Preceptor sessions at least four hours per week to include case presentation by students and
beside rounds. These sessions should include a teaching physician and students only.
ix. A minimum of eight clinical write-ups per student based on a detailed history and physical
examination of patients. Two of these twelve write-ups are dedicated to geriatric patients
which must be relevant to the special issues raised by geriatric patients and not merely case
write-ups of an elderly patient alone. The special geriatric issues are listed in the Core
Topics and Patients section below. In all students should review relevant laboratory and
imaging data and include a complete data base and problem list; diagnostic, therapeutic and
educational plans; and an assessment on each aspect of the case. This assessment should
require considerable supplementary reading. The preceptor must read and critique these
write-ups and return them to the student in a timely fashion. This timely interaction among
faculty and student is an essential and core responsibility of the preceptor faculty.
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x. A mid-term evaluation of each students performance is an important part of the rotation. This
must include a review of the students patient log, a review of the student evaluations
submitted by residents and attending who have had contact with the student, and a thorough
discussion of the students strengths and weaknesses with advice as to how the student may
improve.
xi. An oral examination at the end of the clerkship uses a format described above under
Evaluations and Grading
xii. All students must take the NBME Clinical Subject Examination in Internal Medicine. The school
sends the grades on these exams to the hospital for incorporation into the final evaluation.
3. EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES
The twelve-week core clerkship in internal medicine is based in acute care medical centers or
appropriately designed and accredited ambulatory care facilities. The curriculum is designed to
provide students with formal instruction and patient care experience so as to enable them to
develop the knowledge, skills and behavior necessary to begin mastering the following clinical
competencies essential to becoming a knowledgeable, complete and caring physician.
Students gain these and the additional skills outlined below by functioning as integral members of
the patient care team, participating in resident work rounds and teaching attending bedside rounds
every weekday and admitting patients when on-call and following them until discharge under the
continuous supervision of the residents. Additional activities include meetings with their preceptors
at least four hours per week (conferences for students only), attendance at daily didactic conferences
and independent learning including completing web-based education assignments. An orientation
at the start of the clerkship outlines the educational goals and objectives of the clerkship as
well as the responsibilities of third year clerks, and assignments and schedules. Clerks are
provided feedback regularly on their progress as well as during both midcourse and final summative
reviews with their preceptor or clerkship director.
MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE
Demonstrate knowledge of the principal syndromes and illnesses in Internal Medicine, their
underlying causes both medically and socially and the various diagnostic and therapeutic options
available to physicians in the care of their patients.
Demonstrate knowledge of the indications for and the ability to interpret standard diagnostic tests,
e.g.,CBC, chemistries, chest x-rays, urinalysis, EKGs, as well as other relevant specialized tests.
Recognize unusual presentations of disease in elderly patients and demonstrate understanding of the
complexity of providing care for the chronically ill with multiple medical problems. This should
include an understanding of end of life issues, as well as bioethical, public health and economic
considerations which arise in our health care system.
Demonstrate knowledge of the indications for various levels of care post-discharge, e.g., short and
long term rehabilitation, long-term skilled nursing facility care, hospice, home care, etc.
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CLINICAL SKILLS
Take a comprehensive history and perform a complete physical exam; formulate a differential
diagnosis and therapeutic plan, employing concern for risks, benefits, and costs. Document clearly
and proficiently.
Demonstrate facility in communication with patients, families and other care givers in a culturally
competent manner.
Analyze and document additional clinical information, lab tests and changes in patients clinical
status; note changes in the differential diagnosis or in the diagnostic or therapeutic plans as
circumstances and test results themselves change.
Demonstrate proficiency in basic procedures, such as venipuncture, arterial puncture, naso-gastric
tube insertion, insertion of intravenous lines, urinary bladder catheterization, etc. Observe more
complex procedures such as thoracentesis, lumbar puncture, central line insertion and ventilator
management.
PROFESSIONAL BEHAVIOR
Demonstrate a regimen of independent learning through the reading of suggested basic texts,
research via the Internet and through other electronic resources, e.g., Up-To-Date, maintenance of
the patient encounter log and completion of the web-based educational program requirements.
Demonstrate a commitment to quality, patient safety and self-directed improvement.
Demonstrate competency and comfort in dealing with people of varying racial, cultural, and religious
backgrounds
Demonstrate a commitment to treating all patients, families and other caregivers with respect.
Participate fully with the patient care team and fulfill all responsibilities in a timely fashion.
Maintain a professional appearance and demeanor.
Demonstrate facility in working in concert with other caregivers, nutritionists and social workers/
discharge planners to obtain optimal, seamless multidisciplinary care for their patients, both during
the hospitalization and after discharge.
4. CORE TOPICS & PATIENTS
The core topics that provide the foundation of knowledge for internal medicine are those found in
any number of standard text books. Students should choose a text book that can be read in its
its entirety during the 12 week medicine of clerkship. Examples of such textbooks are Cecil,
Essentials of Medicine, as well as the Medicine Text by Kumar & Clark and Davidson. Also
recommended are the companion texts, Medicine, A Competency Bases Companion by Israel and
Tunkel as well as Symptom to Diagnosis, An Evidence-based Guide by Stern, Cifu and Altkorn.
Satisfactory performance on the NBME Clinical Subject Exam as well as the USMLE Step 2 CK exam
will depend to a great extent on the dedication you give to this reading.
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Students should make every effort to see patients with conditions listed below. This list is based on
Training Problems published by the Clerkship Directors of Internal Medicine. In thinking about
patients this list separates patients as follows:
A. The healthy patient: health promotion and education, disease prevention and screening.
B. Patients with a symptom, sign or abnormal laboratory value
1. Abdominal pain
2. Altered mental status
3. Anemia
4. Back pain
5. Chest pain
6. Cough
7. Chronic pain
8. Dyspepsia
9. Dyspnea
10. Dysuria
11. Fever
12. Fluid, electrolyte, and acid-base disorders
13. GI bleeding
14. Hemoptysis
15. Irritable bowel
16. Jaundice
17. Knee pain
18. Rash
19. Upper respiratory complaints
20. Weight loss
C. Patients presenting with a known medical condition.
1. Acute MI
2. Acute renal failure and chronic kidney disease
3. Asthma
4. Common cancers
5. COPD
6. Diabetes mellitus
7. Dyslipidemia
8. CHF
9. HIV
10. Hypertension
11. Inflammatory bowel disease
12. Liver disease
13. Nosocomial infection
14. Obesity
15. Peptic ulcer disease
16. Pneumonia
17. Skin and soft tissue infections
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Our goal is to provide you with a well-rounded, solid experience in general obstetrics and gynecology.
Each student will spend time on labor and delivery, in the operating room participating in gynecologic
surgery and in the outpatient setting. You may have the opportunity to work with subspecialists
including Reproductive Endocrinologists, Gynecologic Oncologists, Maternal Fetal Medicine
specialists and more.
It is not the purpose of the rotation to prepare students for an ob/gyn residency but rather to assure that
graduates will be competent to initiate a level of care for women that routinely addresses their genderspecific needs. Consequently, the clerkship curriculum is competency based, using practice expectations
for a new intern pursuing a primary care residency as the endpoint.
The ob/gyn clerkship requires that students record their patient contacts in the schools online
patient encounter log. Along with your hands on experience, your learning will be augmented by
three web based resources.
uWise Qbank
UWorld ob/gyn Qbank
Communication Skills Course- The domestic violence and sexual assault modules must be
completed prior to taking the oral exam.
Your patient log along with these three web-based resources will constitute your ob/gyn portfolio which
students need to present at the end-of- clerkship oral exam.
We hope that you become familiar with what the general obstetrician/gynecologist does, have the
opportunity to be exposed to common obstetric and gynecologic procedures, solidify pelvic exam skills
and learn about important topics in womens health to serve you in whatever specialty you ultimately
choose.
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We are looking forward to meeting you, getting to know you and teaching you.
Portions of this overview were based on the University of North Carolina and University of Florida
clerkship overview.
1. MISSION AND INTRODUCTION
To provide a curriculum for the department that promotes the highest standards of
competence and does so in a professional culture that prepares the student for the practice
of the discipline internationally.
To provide a foundation which integrates the basic science in the understanding of normal
and abnormal pregnancy as well as the causes, diagnosis, prevention and treatment options
for diseases of the female reproductive system and to the problems of womens health
generally.
To provide a solid foundation in the discipline of obstetrics and gynecology that will enable
the student to decide if the discipline is an appropriate career choice and if so to enable the
student to succeed in postgraduate training and a professional career as an obstetrician
gynecologist.
To combine medical knowledge with clinical and communication skills providing a solid
foundation on which students can learn to provide quality obstetrical and gynecologic care.
The curriculum of the department of obstetrics and gynecology is designed to assist students in
achieving the following educational goals:
a. To understand the role played by the obstetrician/gynecologist within the scope of womens
health care and when medical issues outside their expertise requires a medical or other
specialty consultation.
b. To gain a base of knowledge in normal as well as abnormal obstetrics and gynecology
and acquire the skills needed to evaluate and treat patients responsibly.
c. To learn the value of routine health surveillance as a part of health promotion and disease
prevention by incorporating age-appropriate screening procedures at the recommended
time intervals.
d. Through the use of written and clinical cases, to acquire a knowledge base in the causes,
mechanisms and treatment of human reproductive illnesses, as well as in the behavioral and
non-biological factors that influence a womans health.
e. To demonstrate a fundamental knowledge of the most common clinical, laboratory, and
pathologic diagnostic manifestations of diseases common to women.
f. To gain an understanding of the principles of bioethics and how they effect patient care.
g. To become aware of the effect of health care disparities on patient care?
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2.
GUIDELINES
a. Length: minimum six weeks.
b. Site: Labor and delivery suite including ob triage, the operating room, gynecology inpatient
units and the ante-partum, post-partum and post-operative Units, Outpatient clinics , private
MD offices and the Emergency Department.
c. At the start of the clerkship, an orientation is given. This includes a discussion of the
expectations and responsibilities of the students and their schedules and assignments to
residency teams and preceptors. The SGU clerkship director for Obstetrics and Gynecology
and the student coordinator participate in this orientation. During the Orientation students
will be advised how to obtain scrubs, lab coats, and ID Badges and a tour of the Ob/Gyn areas
including call rooms.
d. Students take night call no more than every third night, and one weekend call not to exceed
24 hours or one night float schedule, not to exceed residents hours on call. The student will
do a maximum of 6 calls during the 6 week rotation
e. Students participate in attending rounds for house staff and students at least once a week and
work rounds with house staff at least twice a week.
f. A schedule of teaching conferences including staff conferences, residents conferences, grand
rounds, subspecialty conferences and didactic sessions pertinent to the needs of the students
is presented at the orientation. Approximately 30% of the clerkship should be allocated
to protected academic time for teaching conferences and structured independent study.
g. Each student is required to complete a minimum of two clinical write-ups, including one
obstetrical and one gynecological case. Each write-up must include the admission history,
physical examination, review of laboratory and imaging studies impression, assessment and
and diagnostic/therapeutic plan. The history must include any cultural issues that may affect
the patients treatment and compliance. Students must include a discussion of the patients
social supports and any recognizable limits of the doctor-patient relationship, e.g. beliefs. The
write-up should also mention any limitation of the patient: mental, physical, financial or
emotional. When pertinent, the labor and delivery record, operative findings, post-operative
progress notes, and pathology should be included. Each clinical write-up will include a one
page summary of the topic chosen by the student on any aspect of the clinical case study. This
requires a literature search to respond to the clinical question posed by the student. Critiques
of the write-ups are provided to the student by the preceptor. Each student will do a case
presentation based on an interesting topic that was encountered during her/his rotation.
h. Direct preceptor/faculty supervision of the students for at least 3-4 hours per week should
include case presentations by the students, bedside rounds, physical examinations and
interactive sessions.
i. A formal one-on-one mid core evaluation is required. The student is required to bring all case
evaluations and the student log to the meeting. This is required to be reported to the DME
with a signature acknowledgement by the student.
j. Each student will maintain an electronic log of all patients with diagnosis they admit, evaluate
or follow.
k. An oral examination at the end of the clerkship uses a format described above under
Evaluations and Grading. During the oral exam, the students medical knowledge and clinical
skills will be assessed.
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i. All students must take the NBME Clinical Subject Examination in ob/gyn during the last week of
the rotation. They must have the day off prior to the exam as well as the day of the exam. The
The school sends the grades on these exams to the hospital for incorporation into the final
evaluation. If you do not take the exam, you have to take it within one week.
m. Special emphasis is placed on the development of certain skills. By the completion of the
clerkship, the student should be able to competently perform a complete history relevant to
the obstetric/gynecologic patient and a physical examination of the breast and pelvis. (These
examinations must always be performed only when a chaperone is present.)
3. EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES *
Medical Knowledge: The student will learn:
1. Health maintenance and preventive care for women, including age-related issues in cancer
screening, screening for other common adult-onset illnesses, nutrition, sexual health,
vaccination and risk factor identification and modification.
2. Acute and chronic conditions common in womens general and reproductive health,
including their diagnosis and treatment.
3. Principles of physiology and pharmacology applicable to women from puberty through
their reproductive life and menopause, especially pregnancy and age-related changes.
4. Prenatal, intra-partum and post-partum care of normal pregnancy and common
pregnancy-related complications as well as the care of women with acute or chronic
illness throughout pregnancy.
Clinical Skills: The student will demonstrate competence in:
1. Communication skills - Interacting effectively and sensitively with patients, families, and
with health care teams in verbal and written presentations.
Recognize the important role of patient education in prevention and treatment of disease.
Verbal Presentations: Organize a case presentation to accurately reflect the reason for the
evaluation, the chronology of the history, the details of physical findings, the differential
diagnosis and the suggested initial evaluation. Include age specific information and precise
description of physical findings. Justify the thought process that led to the diagnostic and
therapeutic plan.
Written Documentation: Document the independent clinical thinking of the student.
When using templates, or their own prior documentation, students should carefully adjust
the note to reflect newly completed work and to ensure the note is a useful addition to the
medical record. In settings where students are not permitted to document in the EMR, an
alternative form of documentation needs to be established and evaluated by a preceptor.
2. History Taking: patients in more complex situations such as in the emergency and labor
setting, collecting complete and accurate information and focusing appropriately. Describe
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how to modify the interview depending on the clinical situation inpatient, outpatient,
acute and routine settings including Physical Exams which are complete and focused
depending on the indication and condition.
3. Clinical Problem Solving: Using data from history, physical, labs and studies to define
problems, develop a differential diagnosis, and identify associated risks.
4. Clinical Decision Making: Incorporating patient data with patient needs and desires when
formulating diagnostic and therapeutic plans incorporating cultural and ethical issues.
5. Evidence - Based Medicine: Ability to conduct an evidence-based search surrounding a
specific clinical question and to appropriately evaluate the literature to answer such
question.
6. Self - Education: Recognizing knowledge deficits and learning needs through a reflective
self-assessment process, plan or seek assistance in remediation of knowledge deficits,
develop key critical thinking and problem solving skills. Seek feedback.
Professional Behavior: The student will be expected to:
1. Demonstrate compassion, empathy and respect toward patients, including respect for the
patients modesty, privacy, confidentiality and cultural beliefs.
2. Demonstrate communication skills with patients that convey respect, integrity, flexibility,
sensitivity and compassion.
3. Demonstrate respect for patient attitudes, behaviors and lifestyle, paying particular
attention to cultural, ethnic and socioeconomic influences and values.
4. Function as an effective member of the health care team, demonstrating collegiality and
respect for all members of the health care team.
5. Demonstrate a positive attitude and regard for education by demonstrating intellectual
curiosity, initiative, honesty, responsibility, dedication to being prepared, maturity in
soliciting, accepting and acting on feedback, flexibility when differences of opinion arise
and reliability.
6. Identify and explore personal strengths, weaknesses and goals.
* These objectives are based with permission on the 3rd year Ob/Gyn clerkship objectives from the
University of Michigan Ob/Gyn
CORE TOPICS
General
a. History
b. Physical exam
c. Patient write up
d. Differential Diagnosis and management plan
e. Preventive care
f. Professional behavior and communication skills
g. Domestic violence and sexual assault
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Obstetrics
a. Maternal-fetal physiology
b. Preconception care
c. Antepartum care
d. Intrapartum care
e. Care of Newborn in labor and delivery
f. Postpartum care
g. Breastfeeding
h. Abortion (spontaneous, threatened, incomplete, missed)
i. Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy
j. Isoimmunization
k. Multifetal gestation
l. Normal and abnormal labor
m. Preterm labor
n. Preterm rupture of membranes
o. Third trimester bleeding
p. Postpartum hemorrhage
q. Postdates pregnancy
r. Fetal growth restriction
s. Antepartum and intrapartum fetal surveillance
t. Infection
Gynecology
a. Ectopic pregnancy
b. Contraception
c. Sterilization
d. Abortion
e. Sexually transmitted diseases
f. Endometriosis
g. Chronic pelvic pain
h. Urinary incontinence
i. Breast disease
j. Vulvar disease and neoplasm
k. Cervical disease and neoplasm
l. Uterine disease and neoplasm
m. Ovarian disease and neoplasm
Endocrinology and Infertility
a. Menarche
b. Menopause
c. Amenorrhea
d. Normal and abnormal uterine bleeding
e. Infertility
f. Hirsutism and Virilization
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READING
Students should use the most recent edition of the following textbooks:
Required
Obstetrics/Gynecology for the Medical Student
Beckman, et al Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Supplementary
Williams Obstetrics
Cunningham et al, Appleton
Danforths Obstetrics and Gynecology
Scott et al Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins
Clinical Gynecologic Oncology
DiSaia & Creasman, Mosby
Gynecology by Ten Teachers and Obstetrics by Ten Teachers
Monga & Baker, Arnold
Problem Based Obstetrics and Gynecology
Groom and Cameron, Blackwell
Reproductive Endocrinology
Speroff et al, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
Other Helpful Review Texts:
OB/GYN Mentor: Your Clerkship and Shelf Exam Companion
M. Benson, F. A. Davis Company
First Aid for the Wards: Insider Advice for the Clinical Years
Le et al, Appleton & Lange
First Aid for the USLME Step 2 CK and CS
Le et al, McGraw-Hill
Kaplan Lecture Book Series (OB/GYN) Available only through Kaplan
On Line References
APGO Website: APGO.edu
OBGYN 101: Introductory Obstetrics and Gynecology: obgyn-101.org
MDConsult: mdconsult.net
Up To Date: UpToDateOnline.com
These two are particularly good at indicating how the patient presents:
WebMD.com
Eneducube.com
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C. PEDIATRICS
CORE CLERKSHIP
MISSION AND INTRODUCTION
The clerkship in pediatrics provides a learning experience that fosters the highest standards of
professional behavior based on principals of bioethics. It will provide students with a clinical
experience that prepares them to communicate effectively with patients and families and learn to
evaluate and manage children from newborn through adolescence.
The clerkship integrates a foundation of medical knowledge with clinical and communication skills to
enable the student to identify and provide quality pediatric care.
After completion of a six week core rotation during the third year, students will demonstrate a firm
understanding of the competencies required to evaluate and provide care for children who are sick
and well. This foundation is improved and strengthened during an additional four week rotation in
the fourth year, as a sub-intern on a pediatric inpatient unit, or participating in pediatric sub-specialty
training.
The six-week core clerkship allows students to gain clinical experience in evaluating newborns,
infants, children and adolescents, both sick and well, through clinical history taking, physical
examination and the evaluation of laboratory data. Special emphasis is placed on: growth and
development, nutrition, disorders of fluid and electrolytes, common infections, social issues, and
preventative care including: immunizations, screening procedures, anticipatory guidance. The
student will develop the necessary communication skills to inform, guide and educate patients and
families.
Pediatric ambulatory and in-patient services provide an opportunity to observe and enter into the
care of pediatric medical and surgical disorders. The student will learn how to approach the patient
and family and communicate effectively as they take admission histories and perform physical
examinations. They will then provide the patient and parents with the necessary information and
guidance to understand and support the child through the time of illness. The student will learn age
specific skills regarding interviewing pediatric patients and relating to their parents, and will develop
the skills necessary to examine children from newborn through adolescence utilizing age appropriate
techniques. The adequacy and accuracy of the students knowledge, communication skills, manual
skills and professional behavior will be measured and evaluated by their supervising physicians,
residents and preceptors. There will be formative evaluations and discussion of the students
progress throughout the rotation with emphasis on a formal mid-core and end-core assessment.
It is expected that there be full and active participation in the multiple learning opportunities:
didactic learning, clinical seminars, self-directed learning modules, patient rounds, conferences.
Preceptor sessions are mandatory and take precedence over all other clinical activities. Students
should excuse themselves from their other assignments and attend their preceptor session, unless
excused by their preceptor. All of these components are designed to expand the students concept of
how to provide quality care for pediatric patients.
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In the out-patient services, the student learns the milestones of growth and development, infant
feeding, child nutrition, preventative care (including immunization, screening procedures, and
anticipatory guidance), the common ailments of childhood and diagnosis of rare and unusual
illnesses. In the pediatric sub-specialty clinics, the student will observe the progression and
participate in the management of a wide variety of serious and chronic pediatric illnesses.
Emergency department and urgent care experiences permit the student to be the first to evaluate
infants and children with acute illnesses. Emphasis is placed on the evaluation of febrile illnesses, and
common emergencies of childhood (e.g. poisonings, injuries).
The initial management of the newborn is learned in the delivery room. Students then practice the
examination of the newborn and learn about the initiation of feeding, neonatal physiological
changes, and common newborn conditions. In the newborn intensive care unit, the student is an
observer of the management of the premature and term infant with serious illness. Emphasis is
placed on observing and understanding the role of the pediatrician in the multidisciplinary team
approach to critical care.
These experiences are designed to provide maximum contact between students and patients and
their families. The student should use every opportunity to practice communication skills, improve
their ability to perform accurate and concise histories, perform physical examinations, expand their
knowledge of pediatric diseases, and attain skills in utilizing laboratory and radiologic evaluations
most effectively.
GUIDELINES
1. Length: minimum of six weeks.
2. Sites: general pediatric unit, ambulatory care unit, pediatric emergency department, nursery,
NICU, PICU, private office practice, additional sites, as available.
3. At the start of the clerkship an orientation is given. The SGU clerkship director or designee
discusses the programs goals and objectives, the responsibilities of the clerk, the schedule
and assignments to preceptors and residents. The student is introduced to the key
preceptors and staff members in the department.
4. The student must participate in the night, weekend, and holiday on-call schedules. The
clerkship director will set the number and timing of calls.
5. The student must attend scheduled clinical conferences, grand rounds, subspecialty
conferences, and learning sessions. Approximately 30% of the Clerkship should be allocated to
protected academic time for teaching conferences and structured independent study.
6. A preceptor meets with students at least twice a week for a minimum of three hours per
week. The preceptor sessions will include clinical discussions that focus on problem solving,
decision making and adherence to bioethical principals.
7. The student is involved in all patient care activities in the out-patient facility and inpatient
unit.
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8. The student will be observed, and given immediate feedback, as they take a history and
perform a physical examination on a newborn and a child.
9. As an absolute minimum, each student should examine five term newborns. This includes
Reviewing the maternal medical record, performing a physical examination on the infant,
and talking with the parent about basic care of the newborn and anticipatory guidance.
As an absolute minimum, each student should be involved in the care of a child with:
a. a gastrointestinal illness, such as dehydration
b. a child with a neurological or neurodevelopmental problem
c. a child with a respiratory and/or cardiac problem (chronic illness is preferable)
d. a child with fever
There is an additional requirement that medical students learn how to identify and report
child abuse/neglect. There should be involvement in a case where a child is suspected as being
the victim of child abuse/neglect or where the differential diagnosis includes child
abuse/neglect. If such a case does not present itself, a virtual case may be used. There should
should be a discussion of the recognition and reporting requirement and the child protection
response and services.
Involvement in these cases should include taking a history, performing a physical examination,
discussing the differential diagnosis, formulating a plan for laboratory/radiologic studies and
deciding on a treatment plan. These cases may be from the inpatient units, the nursery, the
Emergency Room, or the out-patient setting.
Depending on circumstances, participation may be limited to that as an observer, especially in
cases of sexual abuse, or the use of a virtual case.
As an absolute minimum, each student will participate in the care of two adolescents. This
includes taking a history and performing a physical examination as well as reviewing the
immunization record and assessing the adolescents health, behavior, educational and
environmental issues. It is preferable that one of the two adolescents described will have a
chronic illness.
10. The student will give, at a minimum, one major presentation during the rotation. The
presentation will be evaluated by the preceptor.
11. A minimum of four complete clinical write-ups is required per student. These write-ups will be
critiqued by the preceptor and returned to the student. It is preferable that the patients
selected for these write-ups be examples of the case mix listed in guideline #9 above. The
write-ups will be handed in at intervals during the rotation and returned promptly so that
the student can improve their written expression.
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12. The student will keep a Patient Encounter Log. The log will list all of the patients that the
Student has had direct contact with. The log should reflect a commitment to accurate
record keeping. The note should be concise and reflect knowledge of the case.
13. Each student will have a formative mid-core evaluation. The student will bring a print out of
their Patient Encounter Log to the session. The Log will be reviewed for completeness, quality
of notes and mix of cases. The students professional behavior will be addressed, as well as
progress in attaining the knowledge and skills required to evaluate a patient. There will be
appropriate comments and suggestions given to the student to guide them toward
improvement. The preceptor will submit a written assessment of the Mid-Core evaluation.
14. The student will maintain a log of Manual Skills and Procedures that lists the procedures
performed or witnessed.
The following procedures are recommended to be performed or witnessed during the
pediatric rotation:
a) vision and hearing screening
b) otoscopy
c) administration of inhalation therapy
(Metered Dose Inhaler/MDI/Spacer/Nebulizer).
d) throat culture
e) immunizations: intramuscular injection, subcutaneous injection.
f) nasopharyngeal swab
g) peak flow measurement
15. The students are responsible for completing the introductory modules of the Communication
Skills course prior to the start of the 3rd year core rotations. This self-directed learning
computerized course can be accessed through the SGU website at My SGU (click
Communication Skills course, upper left corner).
In addition, the modules required for the pediatric rotation are:
#21. Communication and Relationships with Children and Parents.
#22. The Adolescent Interview.
16. The student will participate in the self-directed web-based learning course, CLIPP (ComputerAssisted Learning in Pediatric Programs).
The 25 assigned will be completed during the 3rd and 4th years.
Third year Cases
Nursery: 1, 7, 8.
Ambulatory Care: 2,3,4,5
Inpatient: 10, 13,19,25,30
Other: 21, 26,27,28,31
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17. The final written examination will be the National Board of Medical Examiners Clinical Subject
Examination, given at designated sites.
18. An oral examination, lasting 15 minutes or longer, will be given at the end of the rotation.
The student will bring a printed copy of his/her Patient Encounter Log. The log will be reviewed
for commitment to documentation and quality of the notes. The student will bring proof of
completion of the Pediatric USMLE World questions, assigned CLIPP cases and Drexel modules.
The student will present an integrated clinical encounter from a case in his/her log consisting of
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history, physical findings lab results, imaging studies, differential diagnosis and management.
The student will discuss pathophysiology and his/her research of the literature. The examiner
may ask about ethical issues that are relevant to the case. In addition, the preceptor has the
option of choosing another case listed in the log for presentation and discussion. In the second
part of the examination, the examiner will focus on communication skills and interpersonal
relationships. Using the students log the preceptor will create clinical scenarios. The student
will be asked to describe the significant questions that should be asked when taking a particular
history and to describe the importance of positive and negative physical findings on
examination. You will be asked questions, such as: obtaining informed consent, how you
would handle refusal of treatment or the noncompliant patient, how you would approach bad
news or end-of-life decisions. The questions will be far ranging and will evaluate the depth and
knowledge of your thinking. The Examiner will role play to assess your ability to respond to
challenging questions and how you relate to patients and parents. The Oral Exam will give you
the opportunity to demonstrate the knowledge and skills that you have developed the clerkship.
19. The Department of Pediatrics places special emphasis on professional behavior, as well
as knowledge, interviewing skills, clinical problem solving and the ability to communicate
information.
20. The final grade is compiled from information gathered from preceptors, residents and staff
Members who have evaluated the students professional behavior, knowledge, ability to
communicate and clinical skills. The grade on the final written examination and final oral
examination are also major components.
There are 5 components of the grade:
Medical Knowledge
Clinical Skills
Professional Behavior
Oral Examination
Written Examination The student should score one standard deviation above the mean on
the written examination to qualify for an A+ grade on the written examination.
When there is variation in the grades on the separate components, the final grade may be
qualified with a + or a .
An Honors grade (A+) will require an A in every component, an exemplary work ethic and major
contributions to the program as discerned by the Clerkship Director.
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EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES
Medical Knowledge
Gain knowledge in the core topics of the curriculum.
Gain supplementary information and data from journals, texts, research, the internet and other
resources.
Demonstrate knowledge regarding the major illnesses and conditions that affect newborns.
Demonstrate knowledge of health maintenance and preventive pediatrics, including:
immunization schedules, newborn screening, lead testing, TB testing, vision and hearing
screening.
Demonstrate knowledge of growth and development with special emphasis on puberty. (Tanner
Stages)
Compare and contrast the feeding and nutritional requirements of each age and stage of
childhood.
Demonstrate knowledge of fluid and electrolyte balance.
Learn the principles of bioethics and understand how they apply to clinical practice.
Clinical Skills
Demonstrate the ability to approach the patient and family in an empathic and focused manner
to form a positive and informative relationship.
Demonstrate the ability to perform an accurate and organized diagnostic interview and record
the information precisely and concisely.
Perform both comprehensive and focused histories and physical examinations on newborns,
infants, toddlers, children and adolescents.
Participate in the selection of relevant laboratory and radiological tests.
Interpret results to support or rule out diagnoses and arrive at a working diagnosis.
Actively participate in formulating a management plan and participate in carrying out that patient
care plan.
Communicate orally and/or in writing the information necessary to inform and educate all
persons involved in the care of the patient: the patient, family/guardians, nurses and all members
of the multidisciplinary health care team. Communication should avoid jargon and vagueness.
Participate in making decisions regarding management, discharge and follow-up plans.
Interpret laboratory values according to age-related norms.
Accompany and observe senior staff in the delivery room for high risk births.
Communicate with families regarding education and anticipatory guidance during outpatient
visits.
Evaluate common infections and acute illness of children of all ages in the urgent care or
emergency setting.
Evaluate children with serious illness in the inpatient setting.
Evaluate children with chronic and rare illnesses in the outpatient and sub-specialty centers.
Prepare management plans that consider the patients identity, culture and ability to adhere to
the recommendations.
Demonstrate your ability to research topics and apply clinical research to your understanding of
patient issues.
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Professional Behavior
Establish rapport with patients and families that demonstrates respect and compassion.
Appreciate and acknowledge their identity and culture.
Demonstrate honesty, integrity and respect in dealing with patients, families and colleagues.
Adhere to the principals of confidentiality, privacy and informed consent.
Demonstrate that you are a responsible team member and carry out all of your assigned duties in
a timely manner.
Offer assistance when and where it is needed.
Demonstrate that you are an effective member of the team by fully participating in discussions
and contributing to learning endeavors.
Demonstrate sensitivity to issues related to culture, race, age, gender, religion, sexual orientation
and disabilities.
React appropriately to conflicts and ethical dilemmas by working toward solutions.
Demonstrate a commitment to professionalism and adherence to the principals of Bioethics.
Demonstrate responsibility in completing assignments.
Share insights and information with your peers.
Learn to recognize your personal biases and how they lead to diagnostic error.
Learn to recognize when there is a need for consultation.
Prepare for and commit to life-long learning.
CORE TOPICS
General
a. Pediatric history
b. Pediatric physical exam
c. Patient write-up (problem oriented approach)
d. Begin to formulate a differential diagnosis that relates to the
Presenting complaint, symptoms and findings on history and
physical examination.
e.
Formulate a plan for further evaluation (ie.laboratory, radiology), treatment and management.
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Obesity
Neonatology
a. The normal newborn
b. Neonatal problems (jaundice, respiratory distress, sepsis, feeding issues)
c. Newborn screening
d. APGAR scoring/Ballard scoring.
e. Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
f.
g. Bronchiolitis
b. Pharyngitis
h. Asthma
c. Otitis media
i. Foreign body
d. Sinusitis
j. Pneumonia
e. Cervical adenitis
k. Cystic fibrosis
f.
l. Tuberculosis
Croup/epiglottitis
Amblyopia
d. Strabismus
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3. Cardiac
a. Fetal circulation.
b. Congenital anomalies: Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD), Atrial Septal Defect (ASD), Tetralogy of
Fallot, transposition of the great vessels, coarctation of the aorta, patent ductus arteriosus (PDA),
Pulmonic stenosis (PS). The significance of these defects as isolated findings and as they relate to
genetic syndromes.
c. Acquired heart disease: Rheumatic Fever (RF), myocarditis
d. Hypertension
4. Gastrointestinal Disorders (G.I.)
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Gastroenteritis
Constipation/Hirschsprungs disease
Acute abdomen (appendicitis, intussusception, volvulus)
Inflammatory bowel disease
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
5. Endocrine
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
6. Neurology
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Seizures
Meningitis
Head trauma
Cerebral palsy
Tumors
7. Hematology/Oncology
a. Anemias/hemoglobinopathies
b. Pediatric malignancies (Acute Lymphatic Leukemia, lymphomas, neuroblastoma, Wilms tumor)
c. Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)
8. Renal and Genitourinary (G.U.)
a.
b.
c.
d.
9. Dermatology
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
Seborrheic dermatitis
Atopic dermatitis
Impetigo
Fungal Infections
Exanthems
Neurocutaneous stigmata (neurofibromatosis, etc.)
Tanner staging
Precocious/delayed puberty
Stages of adolescent development
Sexually transmitted infections
Pregnancy/menstrual irregularities
Vaginal discharge
Physical abuse
Sexual abuse
Emotional abuse
Neglect
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15. Genetics
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Temper tantrums
Discipline issues
Sleep disorders
Attention Deficit Disorders
Hyperactivity issues
Learning disabilities
Oppositional defiant disorders
18. Immunology
a.
b.
READING
Suggested Approach to Reading for Medical Student Pediatric Rotations
Reading is an essential part of medical education. How to best benefit from the time spent reading
for Pediatrics may vary among individuals. More important, than the reading per se is the retention
of what you have read and the ability to recall and return to the source of the material to create a
library of important material in your notes in your files, and in your memory.
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D. Psychiatry
Core Clerkship
1. Mission and Goals
The mission of the core clerkship in psychiatry is to provide students a clinical experience that will
prepare them to understand, evaluate and treat the entire spectrum of mental disorders in a context
defined by an attitude that displays professionalism, compassion and cultural sensitivity. The
clerkship builds on a foundation of medical knowledge, by adding clinical and communication skills
to enable the student to understand behavioral problems using the biopsychosocial-cultural model
and to construct viable treatment plans.
After completion of the six week core clerkship during the third year, students will demonstrate
sufficient strength in three domains medical knowledge, clinical skills and professional behavior
required to evaluate and participate in providing care for people with mental disorders, in a
multidisciplinary setting. Additionally, students are expected to take from the psychiatric clerkship
an appreciation of the multi-factorial aspects of health and illness in general, and the relationship
between biological, psychological, psychosocial, cultural and medical aspects of health and illness
that will enhance proficiency in clinical situations with all patients. Finally, the clerkship offers
students the opportunity to decide if a career in psychiatry is right for them and to offer guidance on
succeeding in residency training and in professional development.
2. Educational Objectives
Educational objectives are met by engaging in a combination of didactic study and supervised clinical
experience. The specifics of the clinical experience are described more fully below. Essentially,
students are assigned to one or more interdisciplinary clinical teams during their clerkship and will
learn to perform a psychiatric evaluation, to construct a diagnosis and to formulate a treatment plan
by participating in these activities along with other members of the team and under the direction of
their preceptors.
Didactic study will include multiple activities, including classroom activities such as lectures,
seminars, and student presentations, as well as self-directed learning activities such as reading and
working from the Departments web-based curriculum. Approximately 30% of the Clerkship should
be allocated to protected academic time for teaching conferences and structured independent study.
The web-based curriculum includes an introduction and orientation to the clerkship and
requirements of the clerkship; a review of the mission, goals, educational objectives and study topics
described in this manual; study material and links to useful websites for further study; quizzes and
practice tests; a description of the mid-core assessment, the oral exam and the written exam.
At the completion of this core clerkship, the student will be able to:
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Medical Knowledge
1. Identify and define a broad spectrum of psychopathology, taking into account multiple factors
including age, phase of life, sex, ethnicity, culture, religious beliefs, co-morbidities and
experiences of trauma including abuse.
2. Construct a formulation and comprehensive differential diagnosis using a biopsychosocialcultural approach and applying principles of critical thinking to clinical material. Include a
consideration of the direct impact of physical problems and substance abuse as well as of
secondary psychological effects of these.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of the major indications for, use and side effects of commonly
prescribed psychiatric medications. Demonstrate knowledge of behavioral side effects of
commonly prescribed medications and substances of abuse. Demonstrate awareness of
principles of safe prescribing. Demonstrate knowledge of appropriate laboratory tests to be
ordered.
4. Demonstrate basic knowledge of concepts of psychotherapy, including supportive,
psychodynamic and cognitive-behavioral.
5. Demonstrate knowledge of when to make referral to psychiatry and how to utilize the input
of the consultant.
6. Demonstrate an awareness of system failures and disparities in health care delivery, for
example, the influence of gender, race, immigration status and economic status on diagnosis
and access to health care.
7. Demonstrate knowledge of bioethical issues arising in psychiatry such as privacy,
confidentiality and professional boundaries.
8. Demonstrate knowledge for obtaining appropriate consents for treatments and procedures.
9. Demonstrate knowledge of how to evaluate a patients capacity in meeting the requirements of every
day life.
Clinical Skills
1. Conduct a diagnostic psychiatric interview demonstrating empathy and an ability to form a
therapeutic alliance, to elicit valid and reliable information, including in potentially sensitive
areas such as sexual history or history of trauma.
2. Demonstrate ability to utilize a patient centered approach to care.
3. Organize and present a full psychiatric history and mental status examination, including using
critical thinking to construct formulation, differential diagnosis and treatment plan.
4. Evaluate and participate in the management of psychiatric emergencies, including the
assessment of suicidality, dangerousness, intoxication and withdrawal syndromes.
Demonstrate understanding of safety/risk assessment.
5. Communicate with patients and families, as well as with other health care professionals, in an
empathic, informative and professional manner.
6. Function effectively as a member of the multidisciplinary treatment team.
Professional Behavior
1. Demonstrate cultural competency and sensitivity to differences in all aspects such as race,
ethnicity, immigration status, sex, sexual orientation and socioeconomic status.
2. Demonstrate compassion towards patients and their families, even when presented with
significantly disturbed behavior and verbalizations.
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3. Demonstrate awareness of ones own limits and biases and ways in which these may affect
relationships with patients and staff and delivery of patient care.
4. Demonstrate awareness of and willingness to seek consultation and supervision and to
incorporate these into future practice.
5. Demonstrate a commitment to life long and independent learning.
6. Demonstrate awareness of need to advocate for patients and to seek to reduce stigma
associated with mental illness.
7. Demonstrate behavior consistent with the setting and maintenance of professional boundaries.
3. Guidelines
In addition to general requirements expected of students in any rotation, students in psychiatry are
expected to:
Attend all assigned clinical activities
Attend all assigned educational activities, including in their clinical area, e.g., rounds, and in
the department, e.g., Grand Rounds
Be on call as assigned
Complete two to four comprehensive case write-ups and one focused write-up, as assigned
by the preceptor and submit them in a timely manner
Complete assigned activities from the Departments web-based curriculum
Complete other assignments given by the preceptor, e.g., class presentations
Complete modules 13 Managing Strong Emotions and 15 Culture in the Clinical
Interview of the Drexel Communication Curriculum, doc.com
Keep the electronic log current and bring a copy to the mid-core and end-of-core evaluations
Pass the final oral exam
Pass the final written exam
4. Study Topics
The following list of study topics is intended as a guide for the student to supplement the basic
curriculum of lectures. It is not intended to be an exhaustive or exclusive list.
A. Evaluation and assessment
i. Biopsychosocial-cultural model
ii. Psychiatric interview; collateral sources of information
iii. Mental status exam
iv. Capacity and competency with regard to medical decision making
v. Indications for and interpretation of relevant laboratory testing, e.g., Substance
screening, endocrinological tests, and consultations with other physicians
vi. Medical and neurologic assessment
vii. Indications for and use of results of psychological and/or neuropsychological
testing
B. Psychopathology
i. Psychopathology of major disorders, including substance use disorders
ii. Classification systems and differential diagnosis
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C. Management
i. Psychopharmacology
ii. Psychotherapeutic approaches
iii. ECT
iv. Interdisciplinary treatment team
v. Psychiatric emergencies, including assessment of suicidality and dangerousness
vi. Intoxication/withdrawal syndromes.
vii. Civil commitment and treatment refusal
viii. Management of psychiatric disorders in medical/surgical patients
D. Communication
i. Communication in laymans language and patient/family education
ii. Empathy, rapport, therapeutic alliance
iii. Communication with the interdisciplinary treatment team
E. Professional behavior
i. The impact of culture and self-awareness
ii. Professional ethics, informed consent, confidentiality and privacy
iii. Professional boundaries
5. Reading
The most recent editions of the following textbooks are recommended:
Synopsis of Psychiatry, Kaplan and Kaplan, Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins
Introductory Textbook of Psychiatry, Andreason and Black, APPI
Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry, Gelder et al., Oxford Medical Publications
Psychiatry, (second edition), Cutler and Marcus, Oxford University Press
DSM V, American Psychiatric Association, APPI
Students are encouraged to seek additional reading, including journals such as the American
Journal of Psychiatry, The British Journal of Psychiatry, as well as web-based resources and
recommendations from their preceptors.
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E. Surgery
Core Clerkship
Mission Statement:
To provide a Surgical Curriculum that applies consistently to all Clerkship sites in order to include
comparable educational experiences and equivalent methods of assessment across all instructional
sites and to support a learning environment that fosters professional competence within a culture
that prepares students for international medical practice.
To emphasize, review and integrate the students knowledge of basic scientific information with
clinical material to result in favorable educational outcomes in the acquisition of knowledge
regarding the etiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of surgical diseases.
To emphasize to the students the integration of the basic sciences in the development of current
clinical knowledge in conjunction with ongoing changes in surgical treatment and technology.
To provide students with the tools for life-long adult learning of surgical diseases for their ongoing
professional development.
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2. CLINICAL SKILLS
To apply the principles of surgical practice, including operative and non-operative management, to
common conditions.
To develop and apply the tools of clinical problem solving for surgical conditions including the
process of data collection (history, physical examination and laboratory and imaging studies) in
establishing a list of differential diagnoses and a primary working diagnosis for treatment and
further investigation.
To develop interpersonal and communication skills, in conjunction with the broad-range of
clinical skill acquisition, by accessing and completing modules 17 (Informed Decision-making) and
35 (Discussing Medical Error) of the Drexel University communications course @ doc.com.
To identify the importance of and approach to informed consent for surgical operations and
procedures, with emphasis on the risks, benefits, and alternatives.
To identify the importance of interpersonal and communication skills and to apply those skills in
the multidisciplinary care of the surgical patient in an environment of mutual respect.
To demonstrate the ability to conduct proper sterile preparation and technique.
3. PROFESSIONAL BEHAVIOR
To function as a part of the surgical care team in the inpatient and outpatient setting.
To demonstrate proper behavior in the procedural setting, including the operating room, at all
times.
To understand the limits of ones position within the surgical care team in order to appropriately
engage each patient, their friends and associates and their family.
To appropriately seek supervision as provided through the hierarchical structure of the surgical
care team.
To identify and respond sensitively to cultural issues that affect surgical decision-making and
treatment.
To develop an understanding of and approach to the principles of professionalism as they apply to
surgery through the observation of the role-modeling provided by the surgical faculty.
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GUIDLINES
1. Length: twelve weeks
2. An orientation at the start of the clerkship should be provided by the Clerkship
Director. This should include a discussion of the expectations and responsibilities of
the clerk, an overview of the department and facilities of the site, the student schedule
and assignments to residency teams and preceptors. The SGU CTM should be provided
as a reference within the orientation process indicating the location on the SGU
website. A review of the Goals and Objectives, Clerkship Guidelines and evaluation
process should be conducted.
3. Site: predominately general surgical wards with inclusion of ICU, OPD and ED experience
as well as those subspecialty experiences that are available. Students must attend
operations performed on their patients.
4. The twelve week rotation should include exposure to the subspecialties of urology,
anesthesia and orthopedic surgery as well as others that may be available, including
ENT and ophthalmology.
5. Students must take night, weekend, and holiday call with their teams.
6. Attending rounds for house staff and students should be conducted at least three times
a week.
7. The Clerkship must include a schedule of teaching conferences, both in conjunction
with and parallel to the educational opportunities of the residents/registrars, including
grand rounds, subspecialty conferences and didactic sessions that address the Core
topics of the CTM.
WISE-MD and the Core Topics
Distributive learning through the use of WISE-MD (The Web Initiative for Surgical
Education) provides 17 modules that directly apply to the Core Topics. The modules
should modules should be completed as part of the Clerkship and may be used as
proctored and/or monitored components of the scheduled teaching conferences.
SGU Core Topic Modules 1 and 2: WISE-MD Trauma Resuscitation
SGU Core Topic Module 4:
WISE-MD Burn Management
SGU Core Topic Module 5:
WISE-MD Appendicitis, Cholecystitis &
Diverticulitis
SGU Core Topic Module 6:
WISE-MD Bowel Obstruction
SGU Core Topic Module 8:
WISE-MD Colon Cancer & Skin Cancer
SGU Core Topic Module 9:
WISE-MD Hernia & Pediatric Surgery:
Hernia & Hydrocele
SGU Core Topic Module 10:
WISE-MD Breast Cancer Surgery
SGU Core Topic Module 11:
WISE-MD Anorectal Disease
SGU Core Topic Module 12:
WISE-MD Carotid Stenosis
SGU Core Topic Module 17:
WISE-MD Bariatric Surgery and Obesity
SGU Core Topic Module 18:
WISE-MD Adrenal Adenoma Hypercalcemia
& Thyroid Nodule
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The final summative feedback evaluation will determine the grade for the Clerkship and
will be based on five components: 1) Medical Knowledge (page 73 of the CTM, 2) Clinical
Skills (page 73 of the CTM), 3) Professional Behavior (page 74 of the CTM), 4) end-of-core
oral examination and 5) end-of-core written examination. Each component will comprise
20% of the overall grade.
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d. Describe the signs and symptoms of cerebral transient ischemic attacks and outline the
available diagnostic modalities, non-invasive and invasive, used in the evaluation of carotid
artery disease.
e. Describe the clinical course of mesenteric thromboembolic disease and discuss the
approach to diagnosis and treatment.
Module 13: Venous Disease
a. Review the venous system of the lower extremity and develop an understanding of the effect
of tissue pressure, the significance of the muscle pump and the effect of valvular insufficiency.
b. List the principles of management of varicose veins associated with venous insufficiency.
c. Explain the pathophysiology of venous stasis ulcers of the extremities and the principles of
their treatment.
d. Describe the diagnosis and treatment of deep vein thrombosis (DVT), pulmonary embolism
(PE) and the post-phlebitic syndrome.
Module 14: Thoracic Surgery
a. Develop an understanding of the evaluation of a solitary lung nodule seen on chest imaging.
b. List an overview of tumors commonly seen in the chest by location.
c. Delineate the principles of surgical management of lung cancer.
d. Develop an understanding of the commonly seen benign and malignant esophagea disorders
including esophageal malignancy, achalasia and gastro-esophageal reflux disease (GERD).
Module 15: Transplant Surgery
a. Develop an understanding of the status of transplant surgery in the USA and worldwide.
b. Develop an understanding of the immunological aspects of transplant surgery including
commonly used immunosuppressive medications and the side effects of immune-suppressive
therapy.
c. Define the terms, anatomic and biologic, used in the description of transplant donors and
recipients.
Module 16: Laparoscopic Surgery
a. Identify the comparative benefits and risks of laparoscopic surgery in comparison to open
surgical procedures.
b. Develop an understanding of advanced laparoscopic techniques and robotic surgery.
Module 17: Bariatric Surgery
a. Define obesity and morbid obesity based on the body mass index (BMI).
b. List the co-morbid conditions associated with morbid obesity.
Module 18: Endocrine Surgery
a. Describe the symptoms, signs and management of hyperthyroidism.
b. Discuss the evaluation of a thyroid nodule.
c. Discuss the differential diagnosis and treatment of the patient with hypercalcemia.
d. Discuss the pathophysiology of primary, secondary and tertiary hyperparathyroidism.
e. Discuss the diagnosis and management of pheochromocytoma.
f. Discuss the features of Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia (MEN) syndromes and their surgical
treatment.
g. Discuss the diagnosis and treatment of disorders of the pituitary adrenal axis.
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(3) Describe the unique aspects of effective communication with physicians, other health
professionals, and health related agencies in association with surgical treatment and follow-up
surgical care.
(4) Learn to work effectively as a member or leader of a health care team in surgery
(5) Describe the consultative role of the surgeon to other physicians and health professionals.
(6) Learn to maintain comprehensive, timely, and legible medical records associated with surgical
care.
SURGICAL SUBSPECIALTIES
ANESTHESIOLOGY:
Discuss the Pre-operative evaluation of the surgical patient in association with commonly occurring
comorbid conditions.
Discuss the intra-operative factors associated with anesthetic management including: Intubation
and airway management
Care and monitoring of the unconscious patient
Blood and fluid management
Local, regional and general anesthesia
Discuss the postoperative care of the surgical patient including:
Monitoring in the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU)
Pain management
Early and late complications
Discuss the toxicity of local anesthetics agents
ORTHOPEDICS:
Discuss the process of fracture healing.
List common seen fractures of the long bones and pelvis.
Outline the principles of immobilization of bones and joints in trauma.
Delineate the diagnosis and treatment of low back pain and sciatica.
UROLOGY:
List the common symptoms in the presentation of urinary problems.
List the common urological problem encountered in clinical practice.
Identify the methods used to treat ureteric and renal stones.
Outline the diagnosis and management of benign and malignant prostate disease.
OPHTHALMOLOGY:
Describe a normal fundoscopic examination and list the fundoscopic changes associated with
common clinical conditions such as hypertension, diabetes and glaucoma.
Describe the anatomy and pathophysiology of pupillary size and reactions in the diagnosis of
neurologic abnormalities and head injury.
Describe the symptoms and signs of glaucoma.
Describe the management of minor eye trauma including subconjunctival hemorrhage and
corneal abrasion.
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OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY:
Review the relevant clinical anatomy of ear/nose/throat.
Outline the diagnosis and management of common conditions of the ear including cerumen
impaction, foreign body removal, and perforation of the tympanic membrane, Otitis external and
Otitis media.
Develop an understanding of the common conditions of nose and sinuses including deviated septum,
hyper-trophic turbinates, acute sinusitis and chronic sinusitis.
Develop an understanding of common surgically treated conditions of the throat including tonsillitis
(and the indications for tonsillectomy) and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA).
RECOMMENDED
Suggested additional print and on-line sources are:
Books:
Code of Medical Ethics Current Opinions with Annotations, AMA press.
Early Diagnosis of the Acute Abdomen
Cope, Oxford University Press
Essentials of Diagnosis and Treatment in Surgery
(Lange Current Essentials Series)
The Ethics of Surgical Practice Cases, Dilemmas and Resolutions, Jones JW, McCullough LB and
Richman BW, Oxford University Press.
Lecture Notes: General Surgery
Ellis and Calne, Blackwell
Principles of Surgery
Schwartz, McGraw Hill
The ICU Book
Marino, Williams and Wilkins
Journals:
Journal of the American College of Surgeons
Elsevier
British Journal of Surgery
Wiley-Blackwell
Surgical Organizations:
Student membership in The American College of Surgeons is available through FACS.org, with the
support of the Chair of Surgery, and is a well-developed source of educational material for the study
of surgery.
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Educational Objectives
The family medicine curriculum will assist students in achieving the following educational objectives
Medical Knowledge
1. The normal psychosocial development of patients of all ages
2. The role of nutrition, exercise, healthy lifestyles, and preventive medicine in promoting health
and decreasing risk of disease in individuals and populations.
3. The epidemiology of common disorders in diverse populations and approaches designed to
screen and detect illness and to reduce incidence and prevalence of disease on an international
patient population.
4. The knowledge of and provision of effective patient education for the common patient
education topics encountered in the outpatient setting.
5. Demonstrate the physiological changes that occur in the geriatric population and the ability to
develop short and long term treatment plans based on the unique aspects of geriatric patients.
Clinical Skills
1. The ability to understand and utilize evidence-based decision making in clinical practice.
2. The ability to identify and develop management strategies for the psychosocial issues underlying
a patients visit.
3. The ability to perform and present a focused patient history and a focused physical examination
for common problems encountered in family medicine.
4. The ability to use the information gained from the history and physical examination to diagnose
and to manage patients in a family medicine office.
5. Strive for excellence in medical knowledge and quality of patient care through continued life
long learning while recognizing ones own limitations and appropriate utilization of consultation.
6. The ability to identify and understand the principles of End of Life Care, Hospice Care, and
Palliative Care
Professional Behavior
1. Demonstrate empathy and respect irrespective of peoples race, ethnicity, cultural
background, social and economic status, sexual orientation or other unique personal
characteristics.
2. The importance of professional behavior, empathy, and sensitivity to cultural and economic
issues when interacting with patients and members of the healthcare team.
3. Demonstrate humility, compassion, integrity and honesty when dealing with patients,
colleagues and the healthcare team.
4. Promote self care and wellness for ourselves, our patients and colleagues.
5. The ability to identify and understand the principles of ethics including: i. autonomy, ii.
Responsibilities, iii. Beneficence, iv. nonmalfeasance, v. equality.
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Core Topics:
Students are responsible for knowing the presenting signs and symptoms and management of
these problems regardless of whether any patients have been seen in the preceptor ship.
Medical Conditions
1. Abdominal pain
2. Allergic rhinitis
3. Altered mental status
4. Asthma
5. Anxiety
6. Back pain
7. Chest pain
8. Depression
9. Dermatitis (including acne)
10. Diabetes mellitus
11. Ear infection
12. Headache
13. Hypertension
14. Osteoarthritis
15. Respiratory tract infection (including bronchitis, sinusitis, pharyngitis)
16. Somatoform disorder
17. Urinary tract infection
18. Vaginitis
19. Well adult exam
20. Well child exam
In addition, students completing this clerkship should be able to provide patient education in the
areas listed below.
Patient Education Topics
1. Adult health maintenance
2. Hypertension, patient control
3. Asthma management
4. Nutrition guidelines, including
5. Diabetes mellitus, new & cholesterol and weight loss controlled diagnosis
6. Safe sex and contraceptive choices
7. Depression
8. Smoking cessation
9. Exercise
10. Stress management
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WEB-BASED RESOURCES
A. Recognition of the clinically relevant differences between the genders
Describe the nutritional needs of men and women.
http://www.mcw.edu/gradschool/
http://www.umassmed.edu/gsbs/
http://www.gsbs.utmb.edu/
http://www.smbs.buffalo.edu/
B. Knowledge and application of strategies for effective learning and improvement
http://www.ursuline.edu/stu_serv/asc/strategies.htm
http://www.crlt.umich.edu/tstrategies/tscelc.html
C. Knowledge of development and changes across the lifespan
http://www.nichd.nih.gov/
D. An understanding of nutrition in health and disease
http://www.fshn.uiuc.edu/
http://www2.swmed.edu/humannutrition/
http://www.fcs.iastate.edu/fshn/
E. An understanding of the science and management of pain
http://www.aapainmanage.org/
http://www.painmed.org/
http://www.aspmn.org/
http://www.ampainsoc.org/
F. An understanding of the concept of chronic illness.
http://nursing.unc.edu/crci/
http://www.pbs.org/fredfriendly/whocares/
http://www.healingwell.com/pages/
http://www.dartmouth.edu/dmsk/koop/resources/chronic_illness/chronic.shtml
G. An understanding of the principles of environmental medicine
http://www.acoem.org/
http://oem.bmjjournals.com/
http://dmi-www.mc.duke.edu/oem/
http://www.joem.org/
H. Comprehension of normal human sexual function and sexual
dysfunction
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/collection/womens_sexual_function (requires password)
http://pubs.ama-assn.org/cgi/collection/mens_sexual_function (requires password)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Masters_and_Virginia_Johnson
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I.
- 100 -
- 101 -
- 102 -
Learn to identify appropriate issues for the consultant referral and how to appropriately utilize
consultants.
Effectively coordinate with physician and non-physician members of the health care team learn how
to properly transfer care throughout a patients hospitalization, including end of the day and end of
service coverage.
Be able to arrange appropriate care and follow-up for the patient after discharge from the hospital
coordinate care plan utilizing community resources when necessary.
III. Information Management
Be able to document the patients admission information, daily progress, on-call emergencies,
transfer notes, and discharge summaries and instructions accurately and in a timely manner.
Understand the ethical and legal guidelines governing patient confidentiality.
Learn how to access clinical information at the hospital including clinical, laboratory and radiologic
data.
Understand how panic values are communicated from the hospital laboratory to the responsible
team member.
Understand the importance of precision and clarity when prescribing medications.
Use electronic or paper reference to access evidence based medicine to solve clinical problems.
IV. Procedures
Understand the risks and benefits of common invasive procedures, and how to obtain informed
consent.
Effectively explain the rational, risks and benefits for the procedure in language that is
understandable by the patient and/or his/her family.
Gain experience with procedures that are commonly performed by interns and residents.
Recognize potential procedure related risks for the operator and the need for universal precautions.
Write a procedure note.
Ensure that samples obtained are properly prepared for laboratory processing.
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C. EMERGENCY MEDICINE
MISSION AND INTRODUCTION
The emergency medicine rotation provides a learning experience aimed at teaching medical students
the necessary skills to take care of patients with a wide variety of undifferentiated urgent and
emergent conditions. Our mission is to enable students to develop and demonstrate the core
competencies in knowledge, skills and behaviors of an effective emergency department clinician.
GUIDELINES
The emergency medicine curriculum objectives specify student skills and behaviors that are central
to care of an emergency department (ED) patient and are appropriately evaluated in the context of
the outcome objective for the medical program.
The Emergency Medicine objectives can be taught and evaluated in the following various settings to
include clinical bedside teaching, observed structured clinical evaluation, lectures, problem-based
learning groups, self-directed learning materials, and simulations.
Structure
Length: four to six weeks
Site: Emergency Department/Accident and Emergency Department (UK).
The Clerkship Director will provide an orientation at the start of the clerkship. This should
include a discussion of the expectations and responsibilities of the clerk, the general
department, the student schedule and assignments to residency teams and preceptors.
Students should receive log books and the appropriate part of the CTM.
Before the start of the clerkship students are required to access the corresponding online
Emergency Medicine course in Sakai. This course includes an introduction by the SGU
Chair of Emergency Medicine, the curriculum and web-based assignments.
Exposure to undifferentiated patient complaints across all age groups: pediatric, adult and
elderly
Teaching rounds for house staff and students should be done at least once daily.
A full schedule of teaching conferences including grand rounds, residency conferences, and
scheduled didactic sessions specific to the needs of the students.
The clinical faculty must provide direct supervision of the students for physical examination,
case presentations and clinical procedures.
All clinical write-ups or formal presentations must include a focused history and physical,
problem list with its assessment, and a diagnostic and therapeutic plan.
The clinical faculty will give a final oral examination based principally on the diagnostic
entities the student has seen. These diagnoses are entered into a Patient Log which each
student must keep current. This log is a summation of all the patients with whom the student
has had a significant involvement.
The Deans and the Chair of Emergency Medicine will periodically inspect Patient Logs during
their site visits to assure a reasonable case mix.
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EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES
A. Medical Knowledge - Students will demonstrate medical knowledge sufficient to:
Identify the acutely ill patient
Suggest the appropriate interpretation of tests and imaging data
Develop a differential diagnosis which includes possible life or limb threatening conditions
along with the most probable diagnoses
Describe an initial approach to patients with the following ED presentation: chest pain,
shortness of breath, abdominal pain, fever, trauma, shock, altered mental status, GI bleeding,
headache, seizure, overdose (basic toxicology), burns, gynecologic emergencies, and orthopedic
emergencies
Actively use practice-based data to improve patient care
B. Clinical Skills Students will demonstrate the ability to:
Perform assessment of the undifferentiated patient
Gather a history and perform a physical examination (EPA 1)
Recognize a patient requiring urgent or emergent care and initiate evaluation and management
(EPA 10)
Prioritize a differential diagnosis following a clinical encounter (EPA 2)
Recommend and interpret diagnostic and screening tests (EPA 3)
Perform general procedures of a physician (EPA 12). Correctly perform the following
procedural techniques: intravenous line, ECG, Foley catheter, splint sprain/fracture, suture
laceration
Provide and oral presentation of a clinical encounter (EPA 6)
Develop skills in disposition and follow-up of patients
Demonstrate an availability to patients, families, and colleagues
Communicate effectively and sensitively with patients, families, and with health care teams in
verbal and written presentations.
Acquire skills in breaking bad news and end of life care
Form clinical questions and use information technology to advance patient care (EPA 7)
Critically appraise medical literature and apply it to patient care
C. Professional Behavior Students will be expected to:
Demonstrate dependability and responsibility
Demonstrate compassion, empathy and respect toward patients and families, including respect
for the patients modesty, privacy, confidentiality and cultural beliefs.
Treat patients and families with respect and compassion
Demonstrate an evidence-based approach to patient care based on current practice-based
data.
Demonstrate professional and ethical behavior
Collaborate as a member of an Interprofessional team
Evaluate own performance through reflective learning
Incorporate feedback into improvement activities
Be aware of there own limitations and seek supervision and/or consultation when appropriate.
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CORE TOPICS
The educational core identifies the basic set of clinical presentations, procedures, and educational
topics that would be covered or experienced during the clerkship. There may be some variability in
how this educational core is taught (reflecting the resources of each clinical site). However, the
principle teaching materials will be consistent across all training sites. The various educational venues
used to teach these topics and procedures should ideally be complementary and may include
lectures, bedside teaching, self-study materials, medical student-generated presentations, simulated
encounters, direct observation, and laboratory workshops. The Department of Emergency Medicine
will provide 12 Essential Topic PowerPoint Presentations to serve as the foundation for a didactic
lecture series. Again, these lectures are not meant to be the only didactic presentations a student will
encounter or negate the importance of other educational presentations.
A.
Clinical experience.
Clinical experience in the ED is the foundation of all emergency medicine clerkships. The major
portion of the clerkship should involve medical students participating in the care of patients in
the ED under qualified supervision. The clinical experience should provide the student with the
opportunity to evaluate patients across all areas of the age and gender spectrum. Because of
multiple factors, including the unpredictable nature of emergency medicine, clinical experience
may be quite variable, even within a clerkship rotation. Certain presentations of ED patients that
are common. All medical students should have exposure to the following during their clinical
rotations based on a national curriculum.
1. Abdominal/pelvic pain
2. Altered mental status/loss of consciousness
3. Back pain
4. CVA/stroke
5. Chest pain
6. Fever/SIRS/Sepsis
7. Gastrointestinal bleeding
8. Geriatric Emergencies
9. Headache
10. Respiratory Distress
11. Shock/Resuscitation
12. Ob/Gyn Emergencies
13. Trauma/musculoskeletal/limb injuries
14. Wound care
This list is not meant to identify the only types of patients a student will encounter or negate the
importance of many other patient presentations.
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B.
Procedures.
Certain procedures to be taught under appropriate supervision during the emergency medicine
rotation are listed below. Procedures were selected based on clinical relevance, level of student
training and availability within the ED.
1. Arterial blood gas and interpret pulse oximeter
2. ECG
3. Foley catheter placement
4. Interpretation of cardiac monitoring/rhythm strip
5. Nasogastric tube placement
6. Peripheral intravenous access
7. Splint application
8. Wound Care: laceration repair (simple), incision and drainage (abscess)
9. Venipuncture
The procedures listed here are derived from previous curricula, consensus opinion, and an
informal evaluation of procedures currently performed on rotations. In recognition of the
variation of what procedures might be available on clinical shifts, the use of labs, mannequins,
direct observation, videotape presentations, and simulators is encouraged.
C.
Emergency
Medicine
I. Sakai courses
A. CORE (Case-base Online Radiology Education)
1. Case 7 Renal/GU
2. Case 8 GI: Trauma
3. Case 16 MSK: Trauma
B. Geriatrics
1. Hypoglycemia-Polypharmacy (Mrs. Green) (Pogo)
2. Case 25: 75-year-old hospitalized woman with confusion - Mrs.
Kohn (Simple)
3. Elder Abuse (Mrs. James) - (pogo)
II. Communication Skills
Module 33 Giving Bad News
Module 38 Communication within Health Care Teams
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Module
Topic
Content sections:
Introduction
Orientation Presentation
The Approach To The Undifferentiated
Patient
Cardiac Arrest
Assigned Reading
Examination
Chest Pain
Assigned Reading
Simulated Patient Encounter
Examination
Pulmonary Emergencies
and Respiratory Distress
Assigned Reading
Simulated Patient Encounter
Examination
Abdominal & GU
Emergencies
Assigned Reading
Simulated Patient Encounter
Examination
Neurologic Emergencies
Assigned Reading
Simulated Patient Encounter
Examination
Critical Care
Assigned Reading
Simulated Patient Encounter
Examination
Poisoning and
Environmental
Emergencies
Assigned Reading
Simulated Patient Encounter
Examination
Trauma
Assigned Reading
Simulated Patient Encounter
Examination
10
Assigned Reading
Simulated Patient Encounter Examination
11
Ethics and
Communication Skills
Online Lessons
D.
SECTION THREE
APPENDIX A
CLINICAL CENTERS and AFFILIATED HOSPITALS
A. UNTED STATES
I. CLINICAL CENTERS
NEW YORK
THE BROOKLYN HOSPITAL CENTER
CONEY ISLAND HOSPITAL
ELMHURST HOSPITAL CENTER
FLUSHING HOSPITAL AND MEDICAL CENTER
KINGSBROOK JEWISH MEDICAL CENTER
KINGS COUNTY HOSPITAL CENTER
LINCOLN MEDICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH CENTER
LUTHERAN MEDICAL CENTER
NEW YORK METHODIST HOSPITAL
RICHMOND UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER
QUEENS HOSPITAL CENTER
WOODHULL MEDICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH CENTER
NEW JERSEY
ATLANTIC HEALTH SYSTEM
OVERLOOK HOSPITAL
MORRISTOWN MEDICAL CENTER
HACKENSACK UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER
JERSEY CITY MEDICAL CENTER
SAINT BARNABAS HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
SAINT BARNABAS MEDICAL CENTER
NEWARK BETH ISRAEL MEDICAL CENTER
MONMOUTH MEDICAL CENTER
ST. JOSEPH REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER
TRINITAS REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER
MICHIGAN
ST. JOHN HOSPITAL AND MEDICAL CENTER
CALIFORNIA
ARROWHEAD REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER
SAN JOAQUIN GENERAL HOSPITAL
OHIO
MERCY ST. VINCENT MEDICAL CENTER
FLORIDA
LARKIN COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
GEORGIA
DEKALB REGIONAL HEALTH SYSTEM
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NEW JERSEY
ATLANTICARE REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER
BERGEN REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER
ST. MICHAELS MEDICAL CENTER
CALIFORNIA
ALEMEDA COUNTY MEDICAL CENTER (HIGHLAND CAMPUS)
MARYLAND
HOLY CROSS HOSPITAL
SPRING GROVE HOSPITAL CENTER
FLORIDA
MIAMI CHILDRENS HOSPITAL
CENTER FOR HAITIAN STUDIES
CONNECTICUT
ST. MARYS HOSPITAL
OHIO
THE JEWISH HOSPITAL
WISCONSIN
MERCY HEALTH SYSTEM
NEW JERSEY
JFK MEDICAL CENTER
MOUNTAINSIDE HOSPITAL
MICHIGAN
DOCTORS HOSPITAL OF MICHIGAN
PROVIDENCE HOSPITAL
WASHINGTON, DC
MEDSTAR NATIONAL REHABILITATION HOSPITAL
FLORIDA
CLEVELAND CLINIC - FLORIDA
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
ILLINOIS
NORWEGIAN AMERICAN HOSPITAL
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B. CANADA
LIMITED AFFILIATED HOSPITAL
VANCOUVER GENERAL HOSPITAL DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY AND
VANCOUVER COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
MAJOR AFFILIATED
University of Saskatchewan
C. UNITED KINGDOM
1. CORE HOSPITALS
NORFOLK & NORWICH UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL & NORFOLK & SUFFOLK NHS FOUNDATION
TRUST
NORTH HAMPSHIRE HOSPITAL (INCLUDING PSYCHIATRY)
NORTH MIDDLESEX UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL & ST ANNS HOSPITAL, LONDON
POOLE HOSPITAL NHS FOUNDATION TRUST & ST ANNS HOSPITAL, POOLE
QUEEN ELIZABETH THE QUEEN MOTHER HOSPITAL & KENT & MEDWAY NHS & SCP TRUST
ROYAL HAMPSHIRE COUNTY HOSPITAL
RUSSELLS HALL HOSPITAL (INCLUDING PSYCHIATRY)
WATFORD GENERAL HOSPITAL (INCLUDING PSYCHIATRY)
WILLIAM HARVEY HOSPITAL & KENT & MEDWAY NHS & SCP TRUST
EAST ANGLIA
IPSWICH HOSPITAL
NORFOLK & NORWICH UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL
NORFOLK & SUFFOLK NHS FOUNDATION TRUST
SOUTH EAST
KENT & CANTERBURY HOSPITAL
KENT & MEDWAY NHS & SCPT
QUEEN ELIZABETH THE QUEEN MOTHER HOSPITAL
WILLIAM HARVEY HOSPITAL
WEST MIDLANDS
RUSSELLS HALL HOSPITAL
WESSEX
POOLE HOSPITAL NHS FOUNDATION TRUST
ROYAL HAMPSHIRE COUNTY HOSPITAL
ST. ANNS HOSPITAL, POOLE
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NEW JERSEY
ATLANTICARE REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER
DME: Dr. John Lorenzetti
1925 Pacific Avenue
Atlantic City, NJ 08401
Cores: Medicine, Psychiatry and Surgery
OVERLOOK HOSPITAL
DME: Dr. Jeff Levine
99 Beauvoir Avenue
Summit, NJ 07902
MORRISTOWN MEDICAL CENTER
DME: Dr. Jeff Levine
100 Madison Avenue
Morristown, NJ 07960
Cores: Medicine, Ob/Gyn, Pediatrics, Surgery, Family Medicine
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CONNECTICUT
ST. MARYS HOSPITAL
DME: Dr. Juan A. Sanchez
56 Franklin St
Waterbury, CT 06706
Cores: Surgery
MARYLAND
HOLY CROSS HOSPITAL
DME: Dr. Imad Mufarrij
1500 Forest Glen Rd
Silver Springs, MD 20910
Cores: Ob/Gyn
SPRING GROVE HOSPITAL CENTER
DME: Dr. David Helsel
55 Wade Avenue
Catonsville, MD 21228
Cores: Psychiatry
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MICHIGAN
DOCTORS HOSPITAL OF MICHIGAN
DME: Dr. Nikhil Hemady
461 West Huron Street
Pontiac, MI 48341
Rotation: Family Medicine
PROVIDENCE HOSPITAL
DME: Dr. Paul Lessem
16001 W Nine Mile Rd
Southfield, MI 48075
Cores: Psychiatry
ST. JOHN HOSPITAL AND MEDICAL CENTER
DME: Dr. Ali Rabbani
22101 Moross Road
Detroit, MI 48236
Cores: Medicine, Ob/Gyn, Pediatrics, and Surgery
CALIFORNIA
ALAMEDA COUNTY MEDICAL CENTER, HIGHLAND CAMPUS
DME: Colin Feeney
1411 East 31st Street
Oakland, CA 94602
Cores: Medicine
ARROWHEAD REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER
DME: Dr. Emily Ebert
400 North Pepper Ave
Modular #2
Colton, CA 92324
Cores: Surgery and Family Medicine
SAN JOAQUIN GENERAL HOSPITAL
DME: Dr. James Saffier
P.O. Box 1020
Stockton, CA 95201
Cores: Medicine, Surgery
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FLORIDA
CLEVELAND CLINIC FLORIDA
DME: Dr. Ariel Fernandez
2950 Cleveland Clinic Blvd.
Weston, FL 33331
Cores: Medicine
MIAMI CHILDRENS HOSPITAL
DME: Dr. Jefry Biehler
3100 SW 62nd Avenue
Miami, FL 33155
Cores: Pediatrics
FLORIDA
THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
DME: Dr. Daniel Tucker
840 37th Place
Suite 2
820 Medical Suites
Vero Beach, FL 32960
Cores: Psychiatry Cores Only
OHIO
Mercy St. Vincent Medical Center
DME: Dr. Randall Schlievert
2213 Cherry Street, DEC
Toledo, OH 43608
Cores: Emergency Medicine, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Ob/Gyn, Pediatric & Surgery
The Jewish Hospital
DME: Dr. Stephen Goldberg
4777 East Galbraith Road
Cincinnati, OH 45236
Cores: Medicine and Surgery
CANADIAN HOSPITALS
VANCOUVER GENERAL HOSPITAL DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY AND VANCOUVER
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE
Vancouver General Hospital
DME: Dr. Soma Ganesan
Psychiatry Administration
4th Fl 715 W 12th Ave
Vancouver BC, Canada
V5Z 1M9
- 119 -
- 120 -
Electives available: Acute Assessment Unit, Anesthesia, Breast Surgery, Cardiology, dermatology,
Elderly Care, Emergency Medicine, Endocrinology, ENT, GI, GU medicine, Hematology, histopathology, Medicine, Neurology, Ob/Gyn, Oncology, Ophthalmology, Orthopaedics, Pediatrics,
Radiology, Renal Medicine, Respiratory Medicine, Rheumatology, Surgery, Urology, Vascular
Surgery
NORFOLK & SUFFOLK NHS FOUNDATION TRUST
Hellesdon Hospital
DME: Dr. Jon Wilson
Drayton High Road
Norwich, NR6 5BE
Cores: Psychiatry
NORTH HAMPSHIRE HOSPITAL
DME: Mr. Simon Keightley
Aldermaston Road, Basingstoke,
Hampshire RG24 9NA
Cores: Medicine, Ob/Gyn, Pediatrics, Psychiatry, and Surgery
NORTH MIDDLESEX UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL
DME: Mr. Paul Maxwell
Sterling Way, Edmonton
London N18 1QX
Cores: Medicine, Ob/Gyn, Pediatrics, Surgery
Electives Available: Anesthetics, Breast Surgery, Cardiology, Emergency Medicine, Endocrinology, GI, Hematology, Histopathology, Infectious Diseases, Medicine, Microbiology, Ob/Gyn,
Oncology, Ophthalmology, Orthopaedics, Pediatrics, Pathology, Radiology, Renal Medicine,
Respiratory Medicine, Rheumatology, Surgery, Urology
POOLE HOSPITAL NHS FOUNDATION TRUST
DME: Mr. Richard Henry
Longfleet Road, Poole
Dorset BH15 2JB
Cores: Medicine, Ob/Gyn, Pediatrics, and Surgery
QUEEN ELIZABETH THE QUEEN MOTHER HOSPITAL
DME: Mr. Graham Ross
St Peters Road
Margate, Kent
CT9 4AN
Cores: Medicine, Ob/Gyn, Pediatric, Surgery
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- 122 -
- 123 -
APPENDIX B
HEALTH REQUIREMENTS FOR CLINICAL ROTATION
Students need a confirmed placement letter in order to start clinical training. In order for the Office
of Clinical Studies to send a confirmed placement letter, students need to have all mandatory health
requirements completed, documented and cleared. The Office of Clinical Studies only accepts
clearance from Susan Conway, RN, Director of Student Health Records. Students must send all
documents by fax and should keep the original. Fulfilling these requirements will satisfy public health
and hospital regulations and is mandatory for all health care workers. Regulatory agencies have
developed these regulations to protect the health of patients in the hospital as well as the health of
other healthcare providers.
SGU health requirements have three parts:
Part I: HEALTH HISTORY
Students are required to complete and sign a personal history form within six months prior to the
start of clinical rotations.
Part II: PHYSICAL EXAM
Students must have a physical examination completed within six months prior to the start of their
first clinical rotation. Our physical exam form needs to be filled out, dated and signed by your
personal physician, nurse practitioner or physician assistant.
Part III: TB SCREENING AND IMMUNIZATION RECORD
A. TUBERCULOSIS SCREENING
Screening consists of a 2 step PPD test or an interferon gamma release assay blood test, e.g.
QuantiFERON - TB Gold within 3 months prior to the start of their first rotation. This requirement is
only for students who do not have a history of a positive PPD.
The 2 step PPD consists of 2 PPD skin test administered 1 3 weeks apart. The PPD must be indicated
in millimeters. If you choose the QuantiFERON - TB Gold, a single screening will complete the TB
requirements as long as the result is negative. Students with a history of BCG vaccination or antituberculosis therapy are not excluded from this requirement.
If your QuantiFERON-TB Gold is positive or your PPD is >10mm now or by history, you need not
repeat these. In this case, the following statement must be signed and dated by a physician and
submitted along with the official report of a recent chest x-ray. This must be done annually.
I have been asked to evaluate _______ (student name) because of a positive PPD (>10mm) or a
positive QuantiFERON - TB Gold. Based upon the students history, my physical exam and recent
chest X-ray (with date), I certify that the student is free of active tuberculosis and poses no risk to
patients.
The exam and the chest x-ray should be completed within 3 months prior to the start of the first
rotation.
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B. MANDATORY IMMUNIZATIONS
1. Serum IgG titers
Students are required to submit laboratory copies of serum IgG titers for measles, mumps, rubella,
varicella and hepatitis B. If any of the measles, mumps or rubella serum IgG titers indicated nonimmunity, students must submit evidence of a MMR vaccination obtained after the non-immune
titer date. For a non-immune varicella titer, two varicella vaccines must be obtained 30 days apart
after the date of the non-immune titer.
2. Hepatitis B
Completion of the hepatitis B series (3 vaccinations) is a mandatory requirement. Students need to
submit the dates of vaccination and the results of a serum hepatitis B surface antibody test obtained
after the series was completed. If the hepatitis B titer result indicates non-immunity, students will
satisfy SGU requirements by submitting proof of one additional vaccine after the titer result date.
Students should also check with your personal physician who may advise further vaccines and titers.
3. Tdap vaccination within five years is mandatory
4. Completing the meningococcal form is mandatory
C. ADDITIONAL VACCINATIONS
Students should also review the health form recommendations for polio and hepatitis A vaccinations.
D. UK REQUIREMENTS
In addition to the above, the following must be completed in order to receive a UK hospital
placement.
1. Proof of a Polio IPV vaccine received within the past 10 years.
2. A lab copy of a hepatitis B surface antigen test with a negative result.
3. A lab copy of an anti-hepatitis C antibody test with a negative result.
E. ANNUAL REQUIREMENTS
After starting clinical training, and in order to continue, students will be required to submit evidence
of:
1. Tuberculosis screening every eleven months. Screening consists of a PPD skin test or an
interferon-gamma release assay blood test, e.g. QuantiFERON-TB Gold. In addition to annual TB
screening, students must submit a completed self assessment form annually which is sent to
students email account.
2. Influenza vaccination every year. The vaccine changes annually and is only considered valid for
one influenza season. A new vaccine is usually made available in September of every year.
Students should be vaccinated before November 1, keep written proof of vaccination and be
prepared to present it to hospitals.
- 125 -
Yes
No
Yes
Cough
Sore Throats
Fevers
Skin Infections
Night Sweats
Rash
Weight Loss
Nausea
Shortness of Breath
Vomiting
Hemoptysis
Diarrhea
No
If yes to any of the above, please explain details and current status
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
- 126 -
Answer Yes or No. If the answer to any question below is yes, provide names and addresses of all
physicians or healthcare providers who participated in the diagnosis, referral or treatment. Give
details, reasons, and dates as appropriate. Please use additional space below or additional pages,
if necessary.
A. Has your physical activity bee restricted or your
reasons during the past three years?
Yes_________ No _________
______________________________________________________________________________________________
B. Do you have any physical disabilities or handicaps _____________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
C.
Have you ever received treatment or counseling for a psychiatric condition, personality, character disorder or
emotional problem?
Yes___________No__________
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
D. Have you had any illness or injury which required treatment or hospitalization by a physician or
surgeon?
Yes___________No___________
_ ____________ _______________________________________________________________________________
E. List any medications you are taking regularly ___________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
F. Do you use drugs or substances that alter behavior? _____________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
G List any allergies and reaction ________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
H. Do you have any significant problems with your health at the present time? No _____________ Yes_______________
______________________________________________________________________________________________
I declare that I have had no injury; illness or health condition other than specifically noted above and will notify
St. Georges University School of Medicine of any changes in my health status.
Date: _____________________________
Signature: _____________________________________________________
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ENT
Neck
Lungs
Heart
Breast
Abdomen
Rectum
Nervous
System
Genitalia
Extremities
I have determined that _______________________________________________is free from any health impairment which is of
potential risk to patients or which might interfere with the performance of his/her duties. This includes the habituation or addiction to
depressants, stimulants, narcotics, alcohol or other drugs or substances that may alter the individuals behavior.
________________________________________
Date
_________________________________________________________
Signature of Examining Physician
_________________________________________________________
Physicians Name (Please Print)
Address: ___________________________________________________________________________________________________
City:________________________________State/Country:______________________________Zip Code:_____________________
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2.
If your QuantiFERON test or PPD is positive (> 10mm) now or by history, you need not repeat these. In this case,
the following statement must be signed and dated by a physician and submitted along with the official report of a
recent chest x-ray. The exam and the chest x-ray must be done within three months before your expected clinical
start date.
I have been asked to evaluate the above named student because of a positive PPD. Based on the students history,
my physical exam and recent chest X-ray (date ________), I certify that the student is free of active tuberculosis and
poses no risk to patients.
- 129 -
All students must submit copies of laboratory results of serum IgG antibody titers to measles,
mumps, rubella (MMR) and varicella. Immunization records are NOT accepted as proof of immunity.
Any laboratory results which indicate non-immunity require proof of additional vaccine
administration.
2. Hepatitis B
Documentation of three doses of hepatitis B vaccine and followed by a positive hepatitis B surface antibody titer.
Alternatively, immunity may be documented by a positive hepatitis B core antibody. For training in the UK students must
also submit have a negative test for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg).
Date
Hepatitis B
Three immunizations at
0, 1 month and 6 months
followed by a serum antibody titer. Students must submit a copy of a hepatitis B surface antibody test.
Date
[ ]
I have read the information regarding meningococcal meningitis disease. I understand the
risks of not receiving the vaccine. I have decided that I will not obtain immunization against
meningococcal meningitis disease.
[ ]
I have had the meningococcal meningitis immunization (Menomune TM) within the past 5
years. Date received: ___________________
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____________
_________________________________
b. Inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) booster within the 10 years is required in the UK
_____________
Date
2. Hepatitis A
a. Two vaccinations at least 1)________
6 months apart.
2)________
or
Date
______________
_________________________________
___________________
___________________
_____________________________________
__ __________________________________
Lab Result
_________________
_________ ____________________________
D. ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS:
UK additional requirements:
1. Proof of a Polio IPV vaccine received within the past 10 years.
2. A lab copy of a Hepatitis b surface antigen test (negative result).
3. A lab copy of a Anti-HCV test (negative result).
Medical School -
- 131 -
09-2010
Are you taking any medications on a regular basis? Yes ____ No _____ If yes, please specify _______
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
Do you use drugs or substances which alter behavior? Yes___ No___ If so, please specify _________
_________________________________________________________________________________
In the past 12 months have you had any of the following?
Yes
No
Yes
Cough
Sore Throats
Fevers
Skin Infections
Night Sweats
Rash
Weight Loss
Nausea
Shortness of
Breath
Hemoptysis
Vomiting
No
Diarrhea
If YES to any of the above, please explain details and current status. ___________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
I declare that I have had no injury; illness or health condition other than specifically noted above and
will notify St. Georges University School of Medicine of any changes in my health status.
- 133 -
APPENDIX C
VISAS FOR THE CLINICAL PROGRAM
- 134 -
RECOMMENDATIONS
International students who enroll in a USMLE preparatory course conducted in the US may qualify for
sponsorship for a US student visa by the educational institution running the preparatory course. St.
Georges students who enter the US on a student visa need to apply for a change of visa classification
while in the US to continue into their clinical training.
Do not apply for your visa or attempt to enter the US for your clinical training without the 3 required
letters from the Office of Clinical Studies. These letters are issued only when placement is confirmed.
The letters are:
- The permanent placement letter.
- The visa support letter from Dr. Weitzman, Dean, School of Medicine.
- The visa support letter from the hospital.
These letters state that the student is a bona fide student in good standing at SGUSOM and explain
the program in medicine. They also state the dates and hospital information.
An immigration officers main concern may be that medical students wish to earn a salary and thus
not leave the US. It is important that students stress that they will not be earning a salary while in the
US for their clinical training and that they have strong ties and/or obligations to return to their home
country. In addition, students will need to provide proof of financial support for duration of stay in
the US and proof of intent to return to home country upon graduation.
Once you receive your visa, be sure to have your visa support letters from the school and hospital
and the permanent placement letter with you whenever you cross the border/enter the country.
Although a student may hold a valid visa, an immigration officer may not be aware that it is
the appropriate visa classification when questioning the student about the purpose of the
visit.
The B1 Visa may be issued for a number of years and may allow multiple entries. However, the entry
permit (I-94) for the visa has a finite lifespan of no more than six months. It is very important that
students remember to renew the visa and/or entry permit before it expires. Students in the US on an
expired visa are considered officially out of status and can be banned from the country for up to 10
years.
US CITIZENS
VISA INFORMATION FOR CLINICAL TRAINING IN CANADA
US Citizens do not require any kind of study visa to enter Canada for the purpose of clinical training
provided their stay is less than 6 months. For more information:
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/study/study-who.asp
- 135 -
APPENDIX D
SINGLE ELECTIVE AFFILIATION AGREEMENT
St. Georges University School of Medicine hereby certifies that:
_________________________________________________ is a matriculated student in good standing and
(Student Name)
has satisfactorily completed all basic science courses, introduction to clinical sciences and appropriate core
clinical training rotations and further represents he/she is fully prepared to begin elective clinical training.
St. Georges University acknowledges that this student has been medically examined. No condition has been
found which would preclude patient contact. The University attests that malpractice insurance is provided.
The Dean will review the rotation description below to insure its academic standards are in conformity with its
own program and will provide written acknowledgement of approval/disapproval before the program may
begin.
Name of institution: ________________________________________________________________
(Name of ACGME or AOA program location and sponsoring institution)
Address:_________________________________________________________________________
The institution represents it has an ACGME or AOA approved residency program in __________
____________________ and will allow this medical student to do an elective rotation under the supervision of
Dr. _____________________________________ an authorized and/ or appointed member of its physician
staff.
Upon completion of the rotation the supervising physician will complete and sign the SGUSOM evaluation
form and return to the Dean at the address below.
Contact Person:_____________________________________ E-mail:______________________________
Phone:__________________________________________
Fax:________________________________
Elective
Name:__________________________________________________________________________
Please note the following:
Participating Student is responsible for any/all program fees
This Single Elective Affiliation Agreement may not be amended
This agreement will begin on the ___________day of _______________, 20_____, the first day of the
rotation, continue in effect during the clerkship and will terminate when the program is completed.
By: St. Georges University School of Medicine__ By:_____________________________________________
(Name of Institution)
_____________________________________
_______________________________________________
Stephen Weitzman, MD, Dean, School of Medicine Authorized Representative
- 136 -
APPENDIX E
The Logbook of Manual Skills and Procedures
By the end of their core rotations all students must be able to perform routine and basic medical
procedures. The acquisition of these skills must be certified, and their monitored by a physician. The
certifying physician must be an attending, consultant or senior postgraduate trainee. The certifying
physician should be a member of the SGUSOM faculty.
Within jurisdictional and individual hospital policy, students may perform procedures on patients but
always under the supervision of a physician and only after proper training and written certification.
In all such patient contacts, students must identify themselves as students to the patient.
The following replaces the paper Green Log which the school has used for many years and can still
be found at many of our hospitals. Students should print the section below called Required Manual
Skills and have the eight required skills certified. This only has to be done once. When complete,
students should fax a copy to their clinical coordinators in the Office of Clinical Studies 631-665-3627.
They should keep a permanent copy for themselves as long as they are a student at SGU. Students
cannot enter their senior year until documentation of these eight procedures is received in the Office
of Clinical Studies.
In addition to the Required Manual Skills the clinical departments have developed a more extensive
list of procedures that students should be familiar with. If students do perform any of them, e.g.
arterial blood samples or lumbar puncture, they must be certified as above for regulatory reasons.
We do not require students to perform any of these procedures, although students should make
every effort to observe as many of these tests and procedures as possible. It is not necessary to send
any documentation relevant to these procedures to the Office of Clinical Studies.
The importance of infection control cannot be overstated and hand washing should occur before,
after and between all patient contacts.
Detailed protocols about selected manual skills can be found on the Clinical Website.
- 137 -
Certification
Procedure
Perform a vein-puncture
and blood draw
Start an intravenous line
Place and remove sutures
Insert a nasogastric tube
Insert a urinary catheter:
Male
Female
Remove a urinary catheter:
Male
Female
Signature
Title
Date
- 140 -
APPENDIX F
ST. GEORGES UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
CRN #: _______________
ID #: _________________
___________________________
HOSPITAL NAME
ADDRESS
DEPARTMENT
_________
DATES OF ROTATION
to
(Month/Day/Year)
_________
(Month/Day/Year)
________________ ________
(City & State)
______________
# OF WEEKS _____
A narrative summary is required; this evaluation will be returned to you if this section is left blank or is not sufficiently
detailed
Using specific examples, comment on the students academic performance, professional behavior, rapport with
staff and patients,
motivation, attendance and any other aspects of their performance during the rotation:
__________
________
________
_______
_______
_______
MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE
CLINICAL SKILLS
PROFESSIONAL BEHAVIOR
ORAL EXAMINATION
NBME CLINICAL SUBJECT EXAM
Affix Official
Hospital Seal
Over Signatures
OR
Notarize Here
________
Name and Title (Please Type or Print)
Signature
__________
Date
________
Please note that students have the right to view the contents of this evaluation.
Return this Form to: Office of Clinical Studies, University Support Services, LLC, 3500 Sunrise Hwy, Bldg. 300, Great River, NY 11739
- 141 -
2.
3.
4.
5.
Medical Knowledge knowledge of basic, clinical and social sciences; the pathophysiology of disease; clinical
signs, symptoms and abnormal laboratory findings associated with diseases and the mechanism of action of
pharmaceuticals.
Clinical Skills diagnostic decision making, case presentation, history and physical examination, communication
and relationships with patients and colleagues, test interpretation and therapeutic decision making. Students
must be observed and evaluated at the bedside.
Professional Behavior their interaction with staff and patients, integrity, sensitivity to diversity and
attendance.
An oral examination commitment to independent learning by presenting proof of completion of their webbased course assignments, commitment to documentation by presenting their patient logs, discussion of an
integrated clinical encounter and communication skills/interpersonal relationships.
The written examination students take the NBME Clinical Subject Exam. The school returns the grades to the
hospital.
- 142 -
CRN #: _________________
ID #: ___________________
CERTIFICATION OF COMPLETED
FAMILY MEDICINE, SUBINTERNSHIP OR ELECTIVE ROTATION
STUDENTS NAME
____________________________
HOSPITAL NAME
ADDRESS
_______ ______________
(City & State)
ELECTIVE
POSTGRAD PROGRAM
DATES OF ROTATION
to
(Month/Day/Year)
# OF WEEKS
_______
______________ _______
(Month/Day/Year)
Using specific examples, comment on the students academic performance, professional behavior, rapport with
staff and Patients, motivation, attendance and any other aspects of their performance during the rotation:
________
_______
_______
_______
_______
_______
_______
_______________
_______
_______
_______
MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE
CLINICAL SKILLS
PROFESSIONAL BEHAVIOR
PASS
FAIL
EVALUATOR
_______
Name and Title (Please Type or Print )
Affix Official
Hospital Seal
_______
Name and Title (Please Type or Print)
Date
_______
Please note that students have the right to view the contents of this evaluation.
Return this Form to: Office of Clinical Studies, University Support Services, LLC. 3500 Sunrise Hwy, Bldg. 300, Great River, NY 11739
- 143 -
Satisfactory
Unsatisfactory
Medical Knowledge
Clinical Skills
Professional Behavior
Patient Log Book Check
Yes
the
No
- 144 -
APPENDIX G
CONFIDENTIAL STUDENT QUESTIONNAIRE
Medicine
Scale**
Questions
1
How well were the clerkship goals, objectives and requirements explained to you at
orientation?
- 145 -
Ob/Gyn
Scale**
Questions
1
How well were the clerkship goals, objectives and requirements explained to you at
orientation?
If you are not specifically interested in Ob/Gyn, how valuable was your clerkship
experience?
- 146 -
Pediatrics
Scale**
Questions
1
How well were the clerkship goals, objectives and requirements explained to you at
orientation?
- 147 -
Psychiatry
Scale**
Questions
1
How well were the clerkship goals, objectives and requirements explained to you at
orientation?
- 148 -
Surgery
Scale**
Questions
1
How well were the clerkship goals, objectives and requirements explained to you at
orientation?
- 149 -
Date of Visit:
Department:
Reviewer:
Clerkship Director:
Chair:
DME:
Med-Ed Coordinator:
Number of Students
3rd year:
###.
4th year:
###.
###.
###.
Review of the Student Feedback Questionnaire and Comment on the Strengths and Weaknesses of the
Program from the Students Point of View: Click to enter text.
Comments:
- 150 -
2. Daily Schedule
Is there an appropriate amount of time allotted for experience in inpatient, outpatient, and
sub-specialty, urgent or emergency care?
5
Comments:
Comments:
Comments:
Comments:
- 151 -
6. Write ups:
Is the required number being submitted in a timely manner? Are the write-ups being
critiqued and returned to students in a timely manner so that students can achieve ongoing
improvement in their written expression?
5
Comments:
Comments:
Comments:
Comments:
- 152 -
Comments:
Comments:
Comments:
Comments:
- 153 -
Print Name
Click to enter text.
Date
- 154 -
Signature:
Site of Visit:
Address:
Program Director:
I. FACILITIES/ACCOMMODATIONS:
On call rooms
Excellent
Very good
Library Facilities
Excellent
Very good
Computer access
Excellent
Very good
Date of Visit:
Number of students
Good
Good
Good
Fair
Fair
Fair
Poor
Poor
Poor
Comments:
No
No
Comments:
Yes
No
Comments:
Gen.
Surgery
3 weeks
V. STRUCTURE OF ROTATION :
Anesthesi
ENT
G.U
Ophthalmolog
a
y
1 wk.
1 wks.
1 wk.
____wks.
Orthopedi
cs
___wks.
Trauma
Vascular
___
wks
___wks
- 155 -
SICU
1 wks
VI.
ON-CALL SCHEDULE/ACTIVITIES:
Excellent
ER O.R
Involvement:
No
Weekends
No.
Good
Fair
Yes
Week days
No
Poor
No.
Comments:
Student
friendly
Structured
Student
friendly
Structured
(a) Clinic
(b) O.R
Subspecialties
Anesthesia
Orthopedics
ENT
Urology
ICU
Vascular /
Trauma
Comments:
Variable:
Program Director
Very good
Good
Fair
Poor
COMMENTS: In SICU
- 156 -
H&Ps
(1) Document on charts: Yes
No
(4) Countersigned by: Residents
No
CLINICAL SKILLS
(1) Done: Yes
No
(3) Supervised by: (a) Residents
(4) Excellent
Very Good
Fair
No
Poor
Comments:
No
No
No
X. NARRATIVE ANALYSIS:
STRENGTHS
Teaching
Autonomy-hands/on
Volume of cases
Clinics
RECOMMENDATIONS
1. Study time requires structure & supervision-mixed revisions.
2. Word of caution about autonomy to be kept in check.
3. Improve on-call experience to allow all students to see acute patients and then follow to O.R.
- 157 -
APPENDIX I
ORAL EXAM FORM
1. Student Portfolio Review
Patient Encounter Log
A review of the printed log presented by the student should result in grading based on:
a. Completeness and reasonableness reflecting a commitment for documentation.
b. Understanding and documentation of the complexities of patient care.
_____ Complete _____ Incomplete
Independent Study Web-based Courses
a. Communication skills modules
b. USMLE World
c. Clerkship Course
- 158 -
Appendix J
- 159 -
Appendix K
(Modified from the NBME website)
Functions
1. Fostering the Relationship
2. Gathering Information
3. Providing Information
- 160 -
APPENDIX L
The Final Clinical Competence Examination (Aims and Objectives)
SGU Graduation requirements
In order to graduate from the medical school students must pass the USMLE part 2 CK and CS
examinations. Alternatively, and most commonly for students not wishing to pursue an
American residency program, they may take the NBME CCSE Exam and the Final Clinical
Competence Examination (FCCE).
Aims & Objectives of the FCCE
The FCCE is designed for graduation purposes to be a rigorous assessment of the clinical skills of
our international medical undergraduates. It is a comprehensive test of clinical competency and
performance in physical diagnosis. The examination assesses the candidates capacity to take a
history, conduct a physical examination, select and interpret investigational data, formulate
diagnostic and management plans, communicate effectively with patients, relatives and other
health workers, and prescribe medicines safely and accurately.
Structure
The FCCE is a 12-station OSCE examination in clinical skills which is administered by a team of 14
consultant clinical examiners over a period of 3 hours and thus requires a single morning or
afternoon for every 12 applicants. It is held bi-annually in the UK in May and December and in
Grenada in February and May.
Standard
The standard of the FCCE is formally defined as the level of attainment of medical knowledge,
clinical skills and attitude which is required of newly qualified graduates of US and UK medical
schools who are about to commence intern training in the US or foundation doctor training in
the UK. The aims and objectives forming the basis of medical education in the UK, as
determined by the GMC for the accreditation of medical schools, are expressed in terms of:
objectives relating to knowledge and understanding
objectives relating to clinical skills and performance
objectives relating to attitudes as they affect professional and ethical behavior as set out
in Tomorrows Doctors 2009 and Good Medical Practice 2013.
Format
The 12 OSCE stations of the FCCE are designed to assess the proficiency of candidates in the
fundamental skills acquired during their five core clinical rotations;
taking a history in Medicine, Psychiatry, Pediatrics, Obstetrics & Gynecology
performing a physical examination of the cardiovascular, respiratory, abdominal and
neurological systems
performing a physical assessment of a surgical patient
- 161 -
provide patient education for all ages regarding health problems and health maintenance
identify individuals at risk for disease and select appropriate preventive measures
recognize life threatening emergencies and initiate appropriate primary intervention
outline the management plan for patients under the following categories of care:
preventive, acute, chronic, emergency, end of life, continuing and rehabilitative
continually re-evaluate management plans based on the progress of the patients
condition and appraisal of current scientific evidence and medical information
Professional Behavior
establish rapport and exhibit compassion with colleagues, patients and families and
respect their privacy, dignity and confidentiality
demonstrate honesty, respect and integrity in interacting with patients and their families,
colleagues, faculty and other members of the health care team
be responsible in tasks dealing with patient care, faculty and colleagues including
healthcare documentation
demonstrate sensitivity to issues related to culture, race, age, gender, religion, sexual
orientation and disability in the delivery of health care
demonstrate a commitment to high professional and ethical standards
react appropriately to difficult situations involving conflicts, non-adherence and ethical
dilemmas
demonstrate commitment to independent and lifelong learning including evaluating
research in healthcare
demonstrate willingness to be an effective team member and team leader (throughout
basic science years, clinical training and practice) in the delivery of health care
recognize ones own limitations in knowledge, skills and attitudes and the need for asking
for additional consultation
participate in activities to improve the quality of medical education, including evaluations
of courses and clerkships
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