1 / 21

Pre-Clerkship Curriculum Overview in Medical School

Learn about Year 1 focusing on human structure and Year 2 on disease, diagnosis, and treatment. Develop patient assessment and communication skills, understand societal impacts on health, and prepare for patient care in hospital and outpatient settings.

jcooper
Télécharger la présentation

Pre-Clerkship Curriculum Overview in Medical School

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to the Pre-Clerkship Curriculum Medical School Years 1-2 David J. Karras, MD, FACEP, FAAEM Professor and Associate Chair of Emergency Medicine Associate Dean for Pre-Clerkship Education

  2. Is there a doctor in the house? Am I a doctor?

  3. Pre-Clerkship Curriculum Overview • Year 1: Normal human structure, function, and development • Year 2: Disease mechanisms, diagnosis, and treatment • Throughout the pre-clerkship years • Patient assessment and communication skills • Introduction to diagnostic reasoning • The physician’s role in society, medical ethics, societal impacts on health, healthcare systems, and professionalism • Culminates in readiness to participate in the care of patients in hospital and outpatient settings – the Clerkship Years

  4. First Year Curriculum

  5. Second Year Curriculum

  6. Doctoring: Introduction to the Culture and Practice of Medicine • Spans Years 1-2 • Introduction to clinical skills • History-taking • Physical examination • Communication skills • Clinical reasoning and diagnosis • Reflections, group discussions • Coordinated with the pre-clerkship block schedule and integrated wherever possible

  7. Clinical Threads • Critical issues affecting the practice of medicine, societal concerns, the role of physicians, and your development as a medical professional • Social Determinates of Health, Medical Ethics, and Population Health • Health Systems Science • Patient-Centered Care and Communication • Quality of Care and Patient Safety • Inter-Professional Education • Professionalism and Professional Identity Formation

  8. Clinical Threads • Span years 1-2 • Concentrated in “Thread Focus” weeks • Introductory lectures during “Doctoring” • Cases and discussions integrated into Block and Doctoring activities

  9. Year 1: Block Dates (Inclusive)

  10. Year 1: Tentative Exam Dates Exam dates may change: Always check the course syllabus!

  11. Learning Approaches in the Pre-Clerkship Years • Lectures • Live, all are captured on video and available later the same day • Occasionally, only a prerecorded lecture is available (no live lecture) • Small-group activities • workshops and laboratories • case-based discussions • Clinical Reasoning Conferences • clinically-focused, self-directed group problem-solving • Simulation sessions • Standardized patient sessions • Clinical mentoring and clinical correlation with real patients • Self-directed and independent learning

  12. Grades in the Pre-Clerkship Years • Final grade in all courses is reported as Pass or Fail only • Numerical final grade in each course is retained by Deans’ office • utilized in determining class rank and awards • identify and counsel students • Points may be deducted from final course grade for excessive and unexcused absences or lateness, or for unprofessional behavior. • Grade components are described in the syllabus of each course

  13. Attendance Expectations • Participation and engagement in the learning environment are components of your professional responsibilities • Attendance is required at all small-group activities • workshops • laboratories • conferences • simulation sessions • Attendance is required at all Doctoring activities • Attendance is encouraged, but not required, at lectures (other than Doctoring) • class capture and PowerPoint slides are available for all lectures

  14. Attendance Expectations • We understand that life happens outside of school • Unexpected absences or lateness may be unavoidable • Unanticipated problems may arise • No excuse required (and no penalty) for • 2 or fewer absences/lateness in required sessions, per block • 4 or fewer absences/lateness in required sessions, per semester

  15. Attendance Expectations • Excessive absences or lateness is considered • >2 unexcused absences/lateness in one Block • > 4 unexcused absences/lateness in one semester • 2 points will be deducted from the final course grade for each excessive unexcused absence or lateness • Excessive absences or lateness may be referred to Honor Board or Academic Standards and Promotions • Excessive absences or lateness may be reflected in Medical Student Performance Evaluation (MSPE) • Details of attendance polices are in each course syllabus

  16. Pre-Clerkship Electives • Opportunities to enhance and enrich your education beyond the required curriculum • Grow professionally • Remind yourself why you went into medicine • Gain insight into potential specialties • Grow personally • Reflect on your experiences • Dig into the interpersonal and societal aspects of medicine

  17. Pre-Clerkship Electives • Humanities • self-reflection, mindfulness, healthy cooking • narrative medicine, visual reflection • history of medicine • Clinical Experiences • addiction medicine • primary care medicine • specialty-specific electives • global medicine

  18. Pre-Clerkship Electives • Optional • participation and attendance are expected once registered • Meeting times vary – check the elective description! • all are in the afternoon • most are on Fridays, will not conflict with scheduled activities • Electives scheduled for Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday afternoons may conflict with your Doctoring College day • do not sign up for a elective on your Doctoring College day! • these electives will be held on other days in future semesters

  19. Textbooks • Mandatory and recommended references are included in the syllabus of each course • Library has reserve copies of all required texts as well as on-line access with limited user licenses

  20. Textbooks List price (before discount): $226 Discount price (30% off): 158

  21. Any Questions?

More Related