October
25, 2012: Gaining
Ground — Quality Improvement
and US Medical Residency
2:00 to 3:00 PM Eastern Time
and US Medical Residency
2:00 to 3:00 PM Eastern Time
Featuring:
Donald Goldmann, MD, Senior Vice President, Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)
Kedar Mate, MD, Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College; Clinical Lead for Research and Development, IHI
James Moses, MD, MPH, Pediatric Director of Quality and Safety, Boston Medical Center; Academic Advisor, IHI Open School for Health Professions
Donald Goldmann, MD, Senior Vice President, Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)
Kedar Mate, MD, Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College; Clinical Lead for Research and Development, IHI
James Moses, MD, MPH, Pediatric Director of Quality and Safety, Boston Medical Center; Academic Advisor, IHI Open School for Health Professions
Residency
training in the US has long had the
reputation of a rite of passage — a period when grueling
hours on busy hospital
floors are spent converting four years of medical school, and some
clinical
exposure, into real-time accountability for real patients who have
sometimes
serious and life-threatening medical conditions.
However,
a changing health care system now demands that
residents develop the skills not just to diagnose and treat patients
who are
ill, but to protect them from harm and to reduce their chances of being
readmitted. Residents need to know about managing chronic conditions
and how to
help patients lead healthier lives. These new goals present newly
minted MDs,
and those who train them, with new challenges — among them,
the need to work in
teams and communicate with everyone, including patients and families,
more
effectively; the need to sleep after long hours on the job and to honor
the
requirement to take the time (and time off) to do so; the need to
engage in
effective handoffs to other providers, and to help coordinate care
across
multiple health care settings.
It’s
a tall order for the nation’s complex system of
training doctors, and aligning what happens in residency programs with
the
ambitions of quality improvement is at an early stage. What are the
challenges?
What can be done to accelerate reforms? Where are promising new models
starting
to emerge?
WIHI
will take up these questions and more in the October
25th program Gaining
Ground — Quality Improvement and US Medical Residency,
with three outstanding guests who are helping to hasten
the
transformation of residency training in the US.
Drs.
Don Goldmann, Kedar Mate, and James Moses are
working with multiple organizations, including the Accreditation
Council for
Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), to better identify what’s
needed, including
building greater capacity among faculty in residency programs to teach
and
model improvement skills. Dr. Goldmann has a strong understanding of
the
structural barriers that must be addressed to make this possible. Dr.
Mate has a
unique and important view on the intersection between residency
training and
the growing field of hospital medicine, as well as innovations emerging
from
primary care practices on their way to becoming patient-centered
medical homes.
Dr. Moses has been instrumental in shaping the offerings of
IHI’s Open School
for Health Professions to ensure they’re relevant and
accessible to today’s
residents.
WIHI
host Madge Kaplan invites you to this timely
discussion on October 25th. Bring your questions and your knowledge and
several
of your colleagues to the program!
To enroll, please click here.
To enroll, please click here.
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