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A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of International Medical Graduates ORIENTING TEACHERS AND IMGs Part A: Orienting Teachers – Understanding the IMGs’ World Part B: Orienting IMGs – Understanding the Canadian Health Care System and Learning Environment

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Page 1: A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of International Medical Graduates ORIENTING TEACHERS AND IMGs Part A: Orienting Teachers – Understanding the

A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of International Medical Graduates

ORIENTING TEACHERS AND IMGs

Part A: Orienting Teachers – Understanding the IMGs’ World

Part B: Orienting IMGs – Understanding the Canadian Health Care System and Learning Environment

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Module Rationale: Part A

● Focus is on developing an understanding of the IMG as a learner and as a physician

● The goal is to facilitate the development of a supportive learning environment and learner-centered strategies

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Objectives - Part A

● Describe the experience of IMGs, including the immigrant experience in general as well as experiences specific to the medical role

● Outline the strengths, common areas of challenge and typical cultural and attitudinal issues that faculty report when teaching IMGs

● Discuss the Canadian cultural lens, examining the assumptions, values and beliefs faculty hold about IMG learners

● Identify strategies to orient a faculty member to an individual IMG

● Create a foundation for building a learner-centered approach to teaching IMGs

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PART A: ORIENTING TEACHERS –

Understanding the IMGs’ World

Information and resources that orient teachers to the challenges faced by

international medical graduates

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Principles

● The background of individual IMGs is very diverse

● Each IMG will have different strengths and gaps, requiring an individualized approach

● The teaching strategies are not significantly different from those used with Canadian-trained learners

● However, the focus and emphasis may be different

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Who is an International Medical Graduate?1. Canadian IMGs:

– Canadian citizens who have completed their medical training outside of Canada or the USA

2.  Visa IMGs: – Foreign-trained medical graduates, working in under-serviced areas.

They hold working visas and function as physicians. Many of these physicians are from the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Australia or South Africa

– Foreign-trained medical graduates who are sponsored (often by their governments) to train in specific medical schools or postgraduate training programs with the expectation that they will return to their sponsoring countries

3.  Immigrant IMGs: – Immigrants to Canada who hold recognized medical degrees

Accessing training through IMG-specific programs Accessing training through the CaRMS second iteration match

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Understanding the IMG Experience

The immigrant experience:● Loss

– Professional– Extended Family– Culture

● Prejudice● Trauma● Language

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Understanding the IMG Experience – Loss

"Medicine has been my whole life until I came here. And it's very hard to give up, it's almost addictive.”

"You know, it sounds very simple …I had always wanted to be a doctor."

"I guess it's the passion for practicing medicine which is driving me on."

IMG Voices

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● Profession

● Extended family

● Culture

Understanding the IMG Experience – Loss

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Understanding the IMG Experience – Trauma

“An IMG trainee has already gone through many life-altering, even tragic, experiences and has overcome hurdles just to get into residency.

They are likely exhausted, financially stressed, scared and anxious.”

Kvern, 2001

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Understanding the IMG Experience - Prejudice

“Feelings of discrimination also contribute to the challenges for IMGs who might feel that they

have been discriminated against with respect to race, educational background, religion, country

of origin and appearance.”

Sannoufi, 2004

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Understanding the IMG Experience - Language

● Medical training may have been in another language, and therefore, their knowledge of medical English may be limited

● Medical training may have been in English resulting in good medical English but little colloquial English

● A significant accent may impair interactions with both patients and preceptors even if both medical and colloquial English is adequate Bates & Andrew, 2001

IMGs face three (3) potential issues when approaching language competency:

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Understanding the IMG Experience - Language

“When you have to think of every word you say,

it is very difficult.”

Sannoufi, 2004

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IMG Narratives – The Immigrant Experience

● How does this information impact on your view of IMGs?

● How would you feel if you had to stop practicing medicine or had to take a prolonged absence from medical practice?

● Will this information affect how you approach teaching IMGs?

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Understanding the IMG Experience – Obstacles to Medical Practice

Obstacles to Medical Practice:

● The immigration process

● Access to the medical profession

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Obstacles to Medical Practice

The immigration process:● "It was devastating for me...the interview at the Embassy

when I was told I would never, ever be able to practice medicine."

● "On our immigration papers, I was not allowed to put in doctor as my profession. The lawyer who processed our papers said that if you put your profession as a doctor, you wouldn't be allowed to immigrate so I came in as a homemaker."

● "I was under the impression that it was going to be difficult to get a job but I didn't think it was going to be impossible." IMG voices

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Obstacles to Medical Practice

Access to the medical profession:

● DIRECT COSTS

● INDIRECT COSTS

         

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Direct Costs

• Medical Council of Canada Evaluating Exam - (costs: $200 for credential review & $800 exam fee)

• Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Exam Part l - (cost $680)

• TOEFL - (cost $150)

• Application fees to provincial IMG recruiting programs

• Translation of documents

• Credential verification – Provincial Colleges of Physicians & Surgeons

• CaRMS – (cost $240 + tax plus $75 credential verification)

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Results

● Many IMGs who pass all these hurdles are still unable to practice medicine.

● 16% of CaRMS applicants (500-600 registered) were successful in finding residency positions.

Crutcher, Banner, Szafran, & Watanabe, 2003

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Indirect Costs

● Income generation

● ‘Observerships’

● References

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Discussion Questions

● What has your experience been with IMGs?

● What are your thoughts about the integration of IMGs into the Canadian health care environment?

● What advantages do you anticipate from this integration?

● What worries do you have about teaching IMGs?

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What Concerns Prevent the Integration of IMGs?

● The cultural lens

● Maintenance of Canadian standards

● Clinical skills

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The Cultural Lens

“It is impossible to adequately conceptualize or effectively work with learners from other cultural

backgrounds without first challenging ones’ assumptions, beliefs and values about who the

learners are.”

Guy, 1999

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Maintenance of Canadian Standards

● Insufficient medical school places

● Stringent accreditation requirements

● 21% of IMGs pass certifying exams compared to 95% of Canadian graduates

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Strengths and Common Areas of Remediation

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Strengths

● From your clinical experience, what strengths have IMGs displayed?

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Strengths

● Often training in other disciplines● Often have seen diseases and disease processes with

which Canadian physicians have little or no familiarity● Dependence on clinical skills because of limited access

to diagnostic tests and investigations● Often older and have more diverse life experiences● Provide a window into their respective cultures, which

may be advantageous when caring for patients of the same culture

● Other strengths?

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Video Clip

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Common Areas of Remediation or Challenge

● From your experience, what are some areas you have needed to address with IMG learners?

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Video Clip

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Eleven Common Areas of Remediation or Challenge

● Previous training - often didactic, large group, content focused

● Time lag since training or practice - may impact currency & accuracy of knowledge

● Familiarity with family medicine● Resource use - access, judicious use, cost● Learning & teaching roles and expectations - hierarchical

settings with no learning risks & no exploration of clinical reasoning

● Clinical experience - minimal patient contact or contact limited by gender, age & race of either the patient or the physician

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Eleven Common Areas of Remediation or Challenge (Cont’d)

● Clinical gaps - urogenital & rectal exams, obstetrical care, adolescent medicine, psychiatry, intensive care, geriatrics

● Psychosocial issues - psychiatric illness, family violence, abortion, rape, drug/alcohol abuse, gender roles and identities

● Doctor-patient relationship - paternalistic training with little experience in communication skills, or patient education

● Interprofessional relationships - may not have worked with many members of health care team; may have limited experience with well-trained nurses/pharmacists

● Evidence-based medicine

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Discussion of Challenges in Teaching IMGs

● Divide into smaller groups of 3 or 4 teachers● Designate one person as the timekeeper and one as

reporter● Choose a particular teaching issue (from group

experience)● Discuss the teaching challenges and potential solutions

associated with this issue● The reporter should capture both challenges and

solutions● On return to the large group, the reporter will present the

top three challenges and solutions from the small groups to the large group

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IMG Narrative

● What issues do you see identified within the narrative that feel consistent with your experience?

● What are possible approaches & solutions to address these concerns?

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Video Clips

● What would your learning plan include for this learner?

● What might you chose to do differently, as a teacher, given the IMG’s previous learning environment?

● What strategies would you use to address the cultural components of learning?

● How would you encourage questioning?

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Orientation to the Individual IMG

● Assessment of previous learning experiences

● Use of portfolios

● Narratives

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Orientation to the Individual IMG

● Preceptor Interview Guide

● Portfolios

“Portfolios include documentation of learning and an articulation of what has been learned….It is essential that the portfolio does not become a mere collection of events seen or experienced, but contains critical reflections on these and the learning that has been made from them.”

Snadden & Thomas, 1998

● Narratives

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Orientation to the Individual IMG (Cont’d)

● Workplace expectations, rules & responsibilities

● Components of the medical interview, physical exam, procedures

● Process for evaluation & feedback

● Learning contracts

● Log sheet of student questions

● Critical appraisal & literature search skills

● Modeling & critical reflection

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Ongoing Faculty Development & Support

● Peer coaching

● Videotape review of teaching interactions

● Use of reflective learning journals

● Small group discussions

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PART B: ORIENTING IMGs-

Understanding the Canadian Health Care System and Learning Environment

Information and resources that provide teachers with information needed to orient IMGs to the Canadian health care system

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Objectives - Part B

● Provide an overview of the Canadian health care system, the role of the physician within this system, the patient-centered approach and the team-based practice environment

● Present a model that will highlight the typical Canadian learning setting and examine some potential differences between this environment and the IMGs’ previous experience

● Describe the role of self-directed learning, problem solving and feedback

● Identify interpersonal competencies including patient-centered interviewing, socio-cultural training and ethics

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Orientation to the Canadian Health Care System

● The components of the health care system and how they are delivered. – National health care system (

http://www.img-canada.ca) Organization and Development of Health Care in Canada Roles of Federal and Provincial/Territorial Governments Professional Organizations Non-Governmental Organizations

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Orientation to the Canadian Health Care System

● The components of the health care system & how they are delivered– How is the health care system organized within the

particular province or health region? The role of regional health boards or other organizational

bodies. Examine the structure of the organizations, their links to physicians and their role in health care decision-making

Hospitals, nursing homes, office practice, other resources. How is health care typically delivered in the setting in which the IMG will be working? Who works in each of these venues and what are their roles and responsibilities?

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Video Clip

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Orientation to the Canadian Health Care System

● The team-based approach to care delivery

● The role of the physician within the system

● The delivery of patient-centered care

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Video Clip

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Video Clip

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Orientation to Learning

● Common learning differences & challenges reported by IMGs & their teachers

● The Canadian learning environment

● Components of an effective learning environment

● Tips & traps

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IMGs’ Previous Learning Environment

● Hierarchical structure● Lecture-based format● Surface approach to learning● Process of clinical reasoning● Patient presentation format● Minimal contact with patients, or limited by age

and gender● Acknowledgment of knowledge or skill deficits● Deference to teachers

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Video Clip

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The Canadian Learning Environment

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Teacher

A General Model of Teaching

Pratt, 1998

Learners

Ideals

Content

Y

X

Z

Context

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Transmission Perspective

Pratt, 1998

Teacher

Learners

Ideals

Content

Z

Context

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Video Clip

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Apprenticeship Perspective

Pratt, 1998

Learners

Ideals

Content

Context

Teacher

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Video Clip

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Developmental Perspective

Pratt, 1998

Teacher

Learners

Ideals

ContentX

Context

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Nurturing Perspective

Pratt, 1998

Teacher

Learners

Ideals

Content

Context

Y

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The “Bottom Line”

● The learning environment may be more supportive and encouraging than many IMGs are accustomed to

● Learners are expected to take much more control of their learning

● Teachers will be supportive and act as facilitators

● Teachers will often be focused on uncovering and enhancing thinking processes rather than presenting content. Through discussing their knowledge, and uncovering their clinical reasoning, the teacher acts to bridge their knowledge and skills to higher levels

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Video Clip

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The Canadian Learning Environment

Better Practice

Current Practice

•Communication skills

•Ethics•Professionalism•Socio-cultural issues

Learning opportunity

Identify the gap:•Knowledge•Skills•Attitudes

Interpersonal competencies:

Self-directed learning

Teacher questioning

Feedback

Learning contracts

Expectations

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The Canadian Learning Environment

Better Practice

Current Practice

•Communication skills

•Ethics•Professionalism•Socio-cultural issues

Learning opportunity

Identify the gap:•Knowledge•Skills•Attitudes

Interpersonal competencies:

Self-directed learning

Teacher questioning

Feedback

Learning contracts

Expectations

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Expectations

● IMGs report some consistent areas where the expectations of teachers are tacit and based on common training and culture

● IMGs report that exposure to Canadian residents is a significant factor in orienting them to residency expectation

– Organizing an opportunity during orientation for residents to interact with regular stream residents and other IMG residents will be helpful

– An alternative would be an opportunity for IMGs to shadow another resident (especially in the inpatient setting)

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Video Clip

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Video Clip

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The Canadian Learning Environment

Better Practice

Current Practice

•Communication skills

•Ethics•Professionalism•Socio-cultural issues

Learning opportunity

Identify the gap:•Knowledge•Skills•Attitudes

Interpersonal competencies:

Self-directed learning

Teacher questioning

Feedback

Learning contracts

Expectations

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Learning Contracts

● Important way to focus self-directed learning● Develop a learning contract for each rotation● Take time at the start of each rotation to discuss

the tasks and responsibilities of that rotation● Discuss how feedback will be given● Commit to a learning task and follow through● Review new knowledge, demonstrate new skill,

or explore a new attitude with the teacher and ask for feedback

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Learning Contracts

● Does your teaching setting have a learning contract?

● If so, does it need to be modified or augmented to meet the needs of IMGs?

● If not, is the group interested in developing one or using one of the two examples provided?

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The Canadian Learning Environment

Better Practice

Current Practice

•Communication skills

•Ethics•Professionalism•Socio-cultural issues

Learning opportunity

Identify the gap:•Knowledge•Skills•Attitudes

Interpersonal competencies:

Self-directed learning

Teacher questioning

Feedback

Learning contracts

Expectations

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Video Clip

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Feedback

● Utilizing feedback is a crucial skill in the development of lifelong learning  

● Feedback can identify both gaps & strengths

● The inaccuracy of self-assessment

● The differences between formative and summative evaluation

● Feedback will often be delivered in a ‘sandwich’

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What was done right

What was done wrong or needs to be improved

What to do next time

Feedback Sandwich

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The Canadian Learning Environment

Better Practice

Current Practice

•Communication skills

•Ethics•Professionalism•Socio-cultural issues

Learning opportunity

Identify the gap:•Knowledge•Skills•Attitudes

Interpersonal competencies:

Self-directed learning

Teacher questioning

Feedback

Learning contracts

Expectations

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Teacher Questioning

“Teaching is not telling but questioning.”

Wilkerson, Armstrong, & Lesky, 1990

“The process of how we learn as physicians eclipses and surpasses the content of any

factual data.” Orientale, 1998

● IMGs should be cued to the variable questions that teachers may ask

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Assess & Expand Clinical Thinking - I

● Factual questions

– What is the appropriate dose of Amoxil for this child?

● Broadening questions

– Can you tell me the differential diagnosis for a chronic cough in this patient?

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Assess & Expand Clinical Thinking - II

● Justifying questions– What outcome would you expect from this treatment

intervention?

● Hypothetical questions– How would your treatment vary if this patient was 20

years older?

● Alternative questions– If the patient chooses not to follow your treatment

plan, what might you expect?

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Assess & Expand Clinical Thinking - III

● Attitudinal questions– How did it make you feel when that patient refused

your suggestions?– What could you have done to enhance compliance?– Have you let negative feelings about this patient

impact on your clinical decisions?

Benzie,1998

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Teacher Questioning Tips

● Ensure sufficient ‘wait-time’ after posing questions. “Wait-time is the amount of time after an initial question has been posed before it is either repeated, rephrased or answered by the teacher.” (Lesky & Borkan, 1990) Typically teachers only wait one second before speaking.

● Refrain from asking two questions simultaneously: one open-ended; the other leading. The second question aborts the problem solving generated by the open-ended question (e.g. What do you think is the cause of his abdominal pain? Do you think it could be renal colic?).

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The Canadian Learning Environment

Better Practice

Current Practice

•Communication skills

•Ethics•Professionalism•Socio-cultural issues

Learning opportunity

Identify the gap:•Knowledge•Skills•Attitudes

Interpersonal competencies:

Self-directed learning

Teacher questioning

Feedback

Learning contracts

Expectations

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Learning Opportunities

“A climate that discourages risk taking will also discourage verbal problem solving….By

acknowledging uncertainty, learners can be guided to explore alternatives and to evaluate critically what is known, rather than to focus

exclusively on finding the right answer”

Lesky & Borkan, 1990

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Video Clip

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Video Clip

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The Canadian Learning Environment

Better Practice

Current Practice

•Communication skills

•Ethics•Professionalism•Socio-cultural issues

Learning opportunity

Identify the gap:•Knowledge•Skills•Attitudes

Interpersonal competencies:

Self-directed learning

Teacher questioning

Feedback

Learning contracts

Expectations

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Video Clip

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Self-Directed Learning

WHAT IS IT?

How would a teacher know you are self-directed?

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Self-Directed Learning

“It is the ability to identify the limits of one’s own knowledge and skills and to organize resources

to learn more.”

Wilkerson et al., 1990

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Video Clip

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Competencies in Self-Directed Learning

● Be self motivating with respect to learning

● Diagnose learning needs realistically

● Translate learning needs into learning objectives

● Relate to teachers as facilitators or resources

● Identify resources appropriate to different kinds of learning objectives

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● Select effective strategies for using learning resources

● Apply new knowledge in practice settings● Relate to peers collaboratively● Be willing to evaluate the effectiveness of both

the information and the process

Competencies in Self-Directed Learning

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Log of Resident Clinical Questions

Date Question

Asked

Resident Question Review Date

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Demonstrate Self-Directed Learning Through:

● Development of a learning contract for each rotation

● Initiation of a discussion at the start of each rotation to review the tasks and responsibilities of that rotation

● Discuss how feedback will be given● Commit to a learning task and follow through● Review new knowledge, demonstrate new skills,

or explore attitudinal issues with your teacher

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Video Clip

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Evaluation

● IMGs may have little or no experience with practice-based evaluations such as OSCEs, direct observation, or videotape review

● The breadth of skills assessed may be different

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CanMEDS Roles

MedicalExpert

Collaborator

Scholar

Communicator

Professional

Manager

Health Advocate

The CanMEDS Roles Framework

© 2001-2005 The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada

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Four Principles of Family Medicine

● The family physician is a skilled clinician

● Family medicine is a community-based discipline

● The family physician is a resource to a defined population

● The patient-physician relationship is central to the role of the family physician

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RIME Evaluation Framework

● REPORTER

● INTERPRETER

● Efficiently and accurately collect patient data

● Recognize normal from abnormal

● Identify and label new problems● Communicate collected data

orally and in writing

● Prioritize problems● Follow up and interpret

abnormal findings and tests● Create differential diagnosis● Prioritize a differential

diagnosis Pangaro, 1999

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RIME (Cont’d)

● Manager

● Educator

● Determine when action is necessary

● Choose most appropriate diagnostic test

● Choose most appropriate management strategy

● Customize a plan according to patient circumstances and preferences

● Identify knowledge gaps● Share new knowledge with

others● Understand the use and limits

of education in the care of patients

Pangaro, 1999

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Evaluation

● What level do you think you are at?

● How do you think teachers will evaluate the level you are at?

● What do you think you would need to do to move up to the next level?

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MANAGER

INTERPRETER

EDUCATOR

REPORTER End of medical school

First-year resident

Second-year resident

Clerkship

Pangaro, 1999

Where Should You Be Along This Continuum?

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Video Clip of Resident

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Evaluation Forms

● Format

● Interpretation

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The “Bottom Line”

● Both feedback and evaluation are areas of significant difficulty for many IMGs. They need to understand that these processes will not only include factual knowledge but also clinical reasoning, communication skills, self-directedness, reflection and critical appraisal

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The Canadian Learning Environment

Interpersonal competencies:

Better Practice

Current Practice

•Communication skills

•Ethics•Professionalism•Socio-cultural issues

Learning opportunity

Identify the gap:•Knowledge•Skills•Attitudes

Self-directed learning

Teacher questioning

Feedback

Learning contracts

Expectations

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Development of Interpersonal Competencies

● Communication skills

● Cultural issues

● Ethics and professionalism

● Socio-cultural issues

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Communication Skills

● Patient-centered model of health care

● Team-based model of care

● Communication with colleagues, consultants & co-workers

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Video Clip

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Socio-Cultural Issues

● Limited ethnic & cultural diversity in previous training

● Need to care for patients independent of practitioners’ personal, social & religious mores

● Role of family in illness & care

● Locus of control of illness

● Attitudes & approaches to death & dying

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Video Clip

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Socio-Cultural Issues (Cont’d)

● Skill development around abortion, sexual orientation, sexuality, teen pregnancy, infertility, divorce

● Delivering bad news

● Gender equality

● Confidentiality

● Power differential

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Ethics & Professionalism

● Behaviour towards patients who hold different beliefs and values

● Patient-centered care● Confidentiality● Dual relationships: treatment of family members

and friends● Relationships with the pharmaceutical industry● Patient autonomy● Power differentials within professional

relationships  

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Ethics & Professionalism

Risky situations:

● Physical exam

● Sexual history-taking

● Psychotherapy

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Ethics & ProfessionalismDanger signals:● Making exceptions for certain patients● Seeking social contact with patients, or doing therapy in

social situations● Confiding sensitive personal information to patients, or being

pressured to do so● Daydreaming about the patient● Accepting gifts from patients, or giving them● Trying to impress the patient with personal "specialness“● Being gratified by a sense of power when a patient’s activity

is controlled through intervention● Wanting to "rescue" the patient

Walsh, Dunn & Freeman, 1999

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Resources

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Video Clip

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Clinically…

● Learn how to present a patient clearly and succinctly

● Identify your differential diagnosis and how you have come to that decision

● Describe your plan

● Identify your learning gap

● Ask for direction …What else would be helpful for me to know?

● Learn how to write chart notes, discharge summaries, consult letters etc….

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Video Clip

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Interpersonally…

Teachers assume that:

● “If you don’t speak it is because you don’t know or don’t care”

● If you don’t know, you will say so BUT be clear about where you are stuck in your thinking

● If you disagree with a teacher or a fellow student you will say so. It is not considered disrespectful to question things but a sign of an active and enthusiastic learner

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Teachers Will Assume That:

● You will share your ideas and experience about diagnosis and management

● Your previous experience will be helpful● You probably have expertise in some areas of medicine

that will exceed that of the teacher● Expectations may be different from previous learning

environments. It is important to explicitly clarify your day-to-day responsibilities & roles

● You are responsible for your learning with the teacher acting as facilitator rather than delivering content.

● You need to develop good information management skills

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Feedback

● Feedback is about your growth as a learner not a reflection on you as a person

● Often there is no right answer in the issues we deal with, therefore, the process of reaching a decision takes on new importance

● In learning situations the teachers’ role is to assess your knowledge base & identify gaps or strengths…and to help you expand your clinical thinking

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Video Clip

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Video Clip