Introduction

This blog is about medical education in the US and around the world. My interest is in education research and the process of medical education.



The lawyers have asked that I add a disclaimer that makes it clear that these are my personal opinions and do not represent any position of any University that I am affiliated with including the American University of the Caribbean, the University of Kansas, the KU School of Medicine, Florida International University, or the FIU School of Medicine. Nor does any of this represent any position of the Northeast Georgia Medical Center or Northeast Georgia Health System.



Friday, August 30, 2019

AMEE 2019 Update

AMEE 2019 UPDATE

I was excited to get to attend and present at the Annual Conference of the AMEE which is the Association for Medical Education in Europe. AMEE is a worldwide organization with members in 90 countries on five continents. AMEE promotes international excellence in education in the health professions across the continuum of undergraduate, postgraduate and continuing education. We have been going to AMEE for several years because of the outstanding plenaries, the energy of the participants, and the high quality and diversity of the presentations.

Since I am almost wholly absorbed in Residency Education at this point in my career, I tried to make sure to hit as many of the session on Postgraduate Education as possible. The Europeans (and most of the rest of the world) call Residency training as the postgraduate period. It makes sense, they go to medical school (undergraduate) then graduate from medical school and have further “postgraduate” training.  This year, AMEE had a track for Postgraduate sessions.  I attended almost all of them and I wanted to highlight a few of my observations.

1) International but similar problems—I saw presentations from the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Thailand, Australia, the United States, Taiwan, Canada, Japan, Singapore, Denmark, Switzerland, Scotland, Argentina, Colombia, and New Zealand. That is mind boggling.  All these were talks just about residency training.  And everyone is grappling with similar issues such as resident well-being, burnout, quality of feedback, teaching a safety culture, curricula, and faculty development.  It is a little reassuring and a little depressing.

2) Resident well-being is an international issue—I thought it was interesting that so many different counties and cultures have this problem. Residents are overworked and underpaid.  They are underappreciated everywhere. One internal medicine program in the Switzerland rearranged their entire rounding schedule to try and address issues of lack of teaching time and administrative burden for the inpatient rounding teams. A pediatrics program created a new resident organization to address the burnout and disaffection that came to their department after increasing stress and a resident suicide attempt. An Internal Medicine program in Singapore created an Escape room orientation game to build teamwork and interdependence.

3) Challenges in the residency curriculum are not the ACGME’s fault—every country and program and specialty has challenges.  Many of the programs had developed amazing and unique ways of addressing their curricular hurdles. A program in Canada was working on a pilot program to help the resident inpatient teams to come to a shared understanding of the purpose of the patient’s hospital admission.  I thought this program was particularly interesting as we have seen delays in treatment and discharges because of the shift-based teams that care for a patient. Twice daily attending changes can cause all kinds of disruptions.  A surgical program in the UK found that their program was put on notice for their poor performance on a national residency survey. They spent the next six years working on the educational environment, support for teachers, and improving the learning conditions in order to address their deficiencies.

4) Simulation is important but it doesn’t solve every problem.  A great talk by a young educator from Scotland looked at the deficiencies of teaching with Simulation. He had several great findings. For one, the simulations no matter how realistic never had the heavy weight of an actual clinical situation. Residents always know that they will eventually find out what the answer is in a simulation not so much in real life.  Another finding was that simulations are always done during the workday, but the most challenging clinical situations always happen to a resident at night or on the weekend.  Every good story from my residency training period begins with “one night when I was on call at ….”

All in all, this was another outstanding AMEE conference. Vienna is a great city to visit and we got to learn about another Subway / Metro system.  It was great to see old friends from England, Brasil, St Maarten, St Kitts, Scotland, the Netherlands, and elsewhere.  Also was nice to see Professor Ronald Harden, the General Secretary of AMEE. Also met several new friends from the US, Austria, Canada, Trinidad & Tobago, and Thailand.  If you are a medical educator, I would highly recommend this meeting as a place to learn and meet new colleagues from around the world.

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