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UGME CURRICULUM RENEWAL FRAMEWORK Principle: “Fully integrated spiral scaffold curriculum through 4 years” Year Year 1 1 M0: Foundation M1: Human Biology & Health Normal ProcessesClinically Applied 2 2 M2: Health & Disease Abnormal ProcessesClinical Integration 3 3 M4 TTC: Transition to Clerkship M5: Med 3 Clinical Clerks Boxes are not scaled 4 4 M6: Med 4 Electives CaRMS M7 TTR: UGME M2: Health& Disease M3:Consolidation Transition to Academic Half Day Abnormal Processes Residency Incorporated into Academic time • Longitudinal Courses I. Clinical Reasoning II. Professionalism/Doctoring III. Clinical Skills ->Community Clinics IV.Community Health/Epidemiology V. Indigenous Health VI.Scholarship in Medicine • Themes/Disciplines Composite Clinical Presentations (CP4) 2 New Faculty Forum #5 June 20, 2013 UGME CuRe Clerkship : Med 3 Outline 1. Review Process ….. Keevin Bernstein 2. Transition to Clerkship (TTC …M4) ….. Nicola Matthews 3. Core Clinical Rotations (M5) ….. Eunice Gill 4. UGME Academic Half Day ….. Nicola Matthews 5. Scholarship in Medicine projects ….. Carla Ens 6. Student Evaluation ….. Keevin Bernstein 7. TTR plans (M7) ….. Keevin Bernstein UGME CuRe Clerkship Goals: Maintain strength of current curriculum i.e. clinical experience Facilitate integrated 4 year scaffold curriculum Develop central governance for clerkship Develop mandatory academic time Provide opportunities for self reflection Introduce key element from FMEC and TG into clerkship • • • • • • • Social Accountability Community Health Science and Public Health Indigenous Health Professionalism Clinical Health Psychology Health Care systems and Interprofessional collaboration Information Science Develop academic project(s) Introduce other elements from 11 UGME CuRe TG UGME CURRICULUM RENEWAL GOVERNANCE Preclerkship Merril Pauls UGME CuREXecutive (…..Directors) Keevin Bernstein Ira Ripstein Vacant Rob Brown Catherine Moltzan Karen Klym Adrian Gooi Barry Cohen Joanne Hamilton Chair Clerkship Associate Dean Eunice Gill Nicola Matthews Curriculum Clinical Academic(TTC/TTR) Simulation Integration Clinical Skills Online Learning Student Evaluation Educ. Development Preclerkship M0 & M1/2 Leaders Longitudinal Course Leaders Longitudinal Theme Leaders Clerkship Core Rotation Leaders UGME CURRICULUM RENEWAL GOVERNANCE CLERKSHIP (Med 3 & 4 ) Preclerkship PreClerkship M0 M1/2 M0 &&M1/2 Leaders Leaders Longitudinal Courses Leaders Longitudinal Theme Leaders Clerkship Core Rotation Leaders Process began in June 2012 UGME CURRICULUM RENEWAL GOVERNANCE UGME CuRe Clerkship Committee UGME CuRe Clerkship Executive Clinical Rotation Leaders Anesthesia Emergency Family Medicine Internal Medicine Obstetrics/Gyne Pediatrics Psychiatry Surgery ENT Ophthalmology Elizabeth Berg PGY3 Steven Promislow PGY3 Amit Kaushal PGY3 in total) Chinniampalan Rajamohan Mona Hegdekar Susan Hauch Mike Semus Jenna McNaught Jeff Hyman/Diane Moddemann Eunice Gill Kris Milbrandt Adrian Gooi Lorne Bellan Consumers (35 Peter Sytnik Med4 UGME CURRICULUM RENEWAL GOVERNANCE UGME CuRe Clerkship Committee UGME CuRe Clerkship EXecutive Chair , CuRe Director Associate Dean, UGME Clinical Clerkship Director Academic Clerkship Director (TTC/TTR) Simulation Director Integration Director Clinical Skills Director Student Evaluation Director Education Development Director Online Learning Director Clerkship Administrator CuRe Assistant (35 in total) Keevin Bernstein Ira Ripstein Eunice Gill Nicola Matthews Rob Brown Catherine Moltzan Karen Klym Barry Cohen Joanne Hamilton Adrian Gooi Tara Petrychko Tina Mills UGME CURRICULUM RENEWAL GOVERNANCE UGME CuRe Clerkship Committee Longitudinal Course/Theme Clinical Skills Community Health Science Indigenous Health Professionalism Diagnostic Imaging Generalism Genetics Geriatrics Health Psychology Health Care Systems Interprofessional care Information Sciences Palliative Care Social Accountability (35 in total) Karen Klym Carla Ens Barry Lavalee Merril Pauls/Aviva Goldberg Jeff Mottola Sandy Marles Kristel van Inevelde Maxine Holmqvist Amanda Condon “ Judy Littleford Paul Daenick Anne Durcan UGME CURRICULUM RENEWAL FRAMEWORK Principle: “Fully integrated spiral scaffold curriculum through 4 years” Year Year 1 1 M0: Foundation M1: Human Biology & Health Normal ProcessesClinically Applied 2 2 M2: Health & Disease Abnormal ProcessesClinical Integration 3 3 M4 TTC: Transition to Clerkship M5: Med 3 Clinical Clerks Boxes are not scaled 4 4 M6: Med 4 Electives CaRMS M7 TTR: UGME M2: Health& Disease M3:Consolidation Transition to Academic Half Day Abnormal Processes Residency Incorporated into Academic time • Longitudinal Courses I. Clinical Reasoning II. Professionalism/Doctoring III. Clinical Skills ->Community Clinics IV.Community Health/Epidemiology V. Indigenous Health VI.Scholarship of Medicine • Themes/Disciplines Composite Clinical Presentations (CP4) 10 UGME CuRe Clerkship - Med 3 2. Transition to Clerkship (TTC): 5 weeks GOALS: 1. Help the student expand their focus from learning during preclerkship years to the actual provision of care in various health care settings. 2. This includes the supervised responsibilities that accompany provision of health and management of disease. 3. Use of simulation, patient assessments, small group sessions and shadowing experiences to teach the students to translate the knowledge gained in pre-clerkship to the clinical setting and the actual provision of care. 4. Begin to facilitate achievement of UGME global objectives transitioning from the predominantly medical expert, scholar and communicator domains to include the collaborator, manager, health advocate and professionalism domains. Transition to Clerkship (TTC): 5 weeks Four components…..and Highlights of each: Introductory Week 1: TTC Launch with keynote speaker and hippocratic oath Metacognition learning style with guest speaker Whole group sessions scheduled for the morning to review selected generic skills Small group sessions in the afternoon. i.e mini Consolidation Modules (CM) Weeks 2 & 4: Simulation in CLSF Small group sessions - Mini Consolidation Modules (CM) and other Introduction to the Longitudinal courses- small groups which will become the weekly academic half day groups during M5. Comprehensive Patient Assessments (CPAs) – Internal Medicine 12 Transition to Clerkship (TTC): 5 weeks Four components…..and Highlights of each: Week 3: Community Week: Students will rotate through various community health care areas in diverse settings and shadow inter-professional teams for either full or half days. • • • • • • Primary Health clinics Aboriginal Health Geriatrics Mental Health Sports Medicine /Rehab Medication Management (Polypharmacy ) Week 5: Transition to Clinical Service Students will be assigned to their first rotation where they will shadow a trainee Students will be orientated to that service with no direct responsibility. 2 buddy calls – including a night and a weekend shift. Assessment: Formative with mandatory attendance for all sessions. 13 UGME CURRICULUM RENEWAL FRAMEWORK Principle: “Fully integrated spiral scaffold curriculum through 4 years” Year Year 1 1 M0: Foundation M1: Human Biology & Health Normal ProcessesClinically Applied 2 2 M2: Health & Disease Abnormal ProcessesClinical Integration 3 3 M4 TTC: Transition to Clerkship M5: Med 3 Clinical Clerks Boxes are not scaled 4 4 M6: Med 4 Electives CaRMS M7 TTR: UGME M2: Health& Disease M3:Consolidation Transition to Academic Half Day Abnormal Processes Residency Incorporated into Academic time • Longitudinal Courses I. Clinical Reasoning II. Professionalism/Doctoring III. Clinical Skills ->Community Clinics IV.Community Health/Epidemiology V. Indigenous Health VI.Scholarship of Medicine • Themes/Disciplines Composite Clinical Presentations (CP4) 14 UGME CuRe Clerkship - Med 3 3. Core Clinical Rotations (M5) Surgery/ Anesthesia 12 weeks 2 groups 14 Peds and Obs/ Gyn 6 weeks each 2 groups 14 Internal & Emergency Medicine Family Medicine /Public Health 12 weeks 6 weeks each 2 groups 14 and Psychiatry 2 groups 14 4 Blocks of 12 weeks each in above order 8 Student Tracks – 2 per block Each student track will consist of 14 students Combined to facilitate joint academic time ECP ( Essential Clinical Presentations) & CP4 (Composite Clinical Presentations) – Not rotation specific 15 CLERKSHIP 2013: Year 3 (M5) Surgery /Anesthesia: 2 groups- 14 students /group 6 WEEKS 6 WEEKS Surgery Core Specialties #weeks Group 1 #weeks Group 2 3 General Surgery 2 Anesthesia 1 1 1 2 Plastics Neuro Urology Anesthesia 2 2 PeriOperative Care MSK Medicine Surgery: Kris Milbrandt 3 General Surgery 2 2 PeriOperative Care MSK Medicine 1 Plastic 1 1 Neuro Urology Anesthesia : Chinniampalan Rajamohan 6 week rotation split into two 3 week sections each with a MITER: General Surgery : 3 weeks all students do GS- 1 student per service Surgery Core Specialties: 3 weeks- 1 week each for all students; 2-3 students Plastics, Neurosurgery & Urology 16 CLERKSHIP 2013: Year 3 (M5) Surgery /Anesthesia: 2 groups- 14 students /group 6 WEEKS weeks Group 1 weeks Group 2 3 General Surgery 2 Anesthesia 6 WEEKS 1 1 1 2 Plastics Neuro Urology Anesthesia 2 2 PeriOperative Care MSK Medicine Anesthesia: Perioperative care: 3 General Surgery 2 2 PeriOperative Care MSK Medicine 1 Plastic 1 1 Neuro Urolog y 2 weeks 2 weeks • Follow a patient through perioperative experience in PAC & in surgery clinics • Pain management curriculum: to include Non-pharmacologic pain managementpsychology, acupuncture and Integrative med ( Joel Loiselle & Paul Daenick) MSK medicine: 2 weeks i) Sports Med (2 days) Pan Am ii) Arthoplasty (2 days) Concordia iii)Trauma (2 days) HSC – on call iv) Physiatry (1days) HSC (v) Peds Ortho (1 or2) 17 CLERKSHIP 2013: Year 3 (M5) Internal & Emergency Medicine: 2 groups- 14 students / grp # Weeks 6 Group1 CTU Group2 Emergency Medicine Outpatient Internal 6 4 Emergency Medicine Outpatient Internal Subspecialty CTU Medicine Internal Med: Mike Semus 2 Subspecialty Medicine Emergency: Mona Hegdekar 6 weeks General Internal Medicine (CTU) 4 weeks Emergency Medicine • ~ 15 emergency medicine shifts, plus optional EMS ride along • Incorporate internal medicine ambulatory care exposure (number and type of clinics are TBD; aim for 2 per week 1 GIM and 1 specialty ) start at 1 per week • Develop continuity between ER and IM (ex. fast track clinic, urgent consult/follow up). 2 weeks of Internal Medicine selective Shared academic time Integrate longitudinal Courses and Themes 18 CLERKSHIP 2013: Year 3 (M5) Pediatrics and Obstetrics & Gynecology # Weeks 6 2 Group1 Obstetrics 2 2 Gyne Group2 Peds Emergency & Outpatient Clinics Peds Inpatients Obs/Gyn: Jenna McNaught 6 3 3 Peds Emergency & Outpatient Obstetrics Gyne Peds Inpatients Clinics Pediatrics: Jeff Hyman 19 CLERKSHIP 2013: Year 3 (M5) Block 4: Family Medicine & Public Health and Psychiatry # Weeks 6 6 Group1 Family Medicine & Public Health Psychiatry Psychiatry Group2 Family Med: Susan Hauch Family Medicine & Public Health Psychiatry: Eunice Gill Psychiatry • More ambulatory care - ? Shared care model with Family Med Family Medicine • Rural Family med – incorporate rural Public health officer Joint Teaching • • Mood/Anxiety/Addictions Public Health/Community Health/Geriatric seminars 20 CLERKSHIP 2013: Year 3 (M5) OTHER Specialties: 1. ENT – TTC and AHD 2. Ophthalmology - 2 half day clinics Location ? 3. Dermatology - clinics ? 21 UGME CuRe Clerkship - Med 3 4. UGME Academic Half Day Scheduled Academic time every Thursday PM: Mandatory attendance Policy no “call” Wednesday past 2300 All at Bannatyne campus in small groups UGME qThursday PM- 2 hrs: 1 - 2:50 PM Centrally governed clerkship curriculum Block specific academic time Maintain central oversight 2 hrs: 3 - 5 PM Developed jointly by 2 departments when feasible • Internal Medicine and Emergency • Anesthesia and Surgery With rotation specific students 22 CLERKSHIP 2013:Year 3 (M5) - AHD Scheduled Academic time every Thursday PM: Mandatory attendance Policy no “call” Wednesday past 2300 All at Bannatyne campus in small groups UGME qThursday PM- 2 hrs: 1 -2:50 PM Centrally governed clerkship curriculum Longitudinal Courses: Community Health Sciences (Public Health & Health care system), Professionalism (& Student Affairs ), Indigenous Health & Clinical Reasoning Longitudinal Themes: Clinical Health Psychology, Diagnostic Imaging, Health Care Systems, Geriatrics, Interprofessional Collaboration & others Mixed Student groups that are not rotation specific Facilitate self reflection Relate recent and relevant clinical experiences to principles 23 CLERKSHIP 2013:Year 3 (M5) - AHD Each 12 week Block will have UGME AHD: Scholarship in Medicine: Professionalism Indigenous Health 3 sessions 2 sessions (3hrs) 1 session Selection from: (either already scheduled or proposed) • Student Affairs ( Electives, wellness) • Clinical Health Psychology (Understanding Trauma, Understanding Grief, Motivation) • Conflict Management Session (IPE) • Collaborative Patient care (IPE) • Diabetes Management • ENT • Geriatrics: Delirium and Hazards of Hospitalization in the Elderly • Palliative care • Pharmacology – Antibiotics • Radiology • Tumor Conference Rounds( proposed by pathology and oncology) • OTHERS UGME AHD Schedule Block 1 BLOCK 1:Oct 1-Dec 22 Thursday, October 3 (June 1 3) UGME Topic: 1300-1500 Scholarship in Medicine Project I Rotation Topic:1500-1700 (Drs. Ens, Littleford & Condon) Thursday, October 10 Thursday, October 17 Thursday, October 24 Thursday, October 31 Thursday, November 7 Antibiotics (Dr. Aoki & Dr. Zhanel) Professionalism - 3 hrs start 12:30 (Drs. Pauls & Goldberg) Student Affairs – Boundaries/Safety (Dr. Martin & Dr. Barakat) OR Collaborative Patient Care (IPE) (Dr.Dean) Scholarship in Medicine Project I (Drs. Ens, Littleford & Condon) Start Time: 3:30 pm Options Not confirmed Motivation Pt. I &. II (Dr. Holmqvist) EXAM, Friday, November 8 (4 Exams) Thursday, November 14 Thursday, November 21 Thursday, November 28 Family Medicine, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Pediatrics, & Psychiatry Radiology (Dr. Mottola) Inpatient Management Diabetes (Dr. Hurd) Indigenous Health (Dr. Lavallee) OR Preliminary Electives Session Thursday, December 5 Thursday, December 12 Thursday, December 19 (Dr. Lee and Dr. Libich) Professionalism - 3 hrs start 12:30 (Drs. Pauls & Goldberg) Scholarship in Medicine Project III (Drs. Ens, Littleford & Condon) Start Time: 3:30 pm Motivation Pt. III (Dr. Holmqvist) EXAM, Friday, December 20 (6 Exams) Family Medicine, Medicine, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Pediatrics, Psychiatry & Surgery UGME AHD Schedule Block 1: Internal & Emergency Medicine BLOCK 1:Oct 1-Dec 22 Thursday, October 3 UGME Topic: 1300-1500 Scholarship in Medicine Project I (Drs. Ens, Littleford & Condon) Thursday, October 10 Thursday, October 17 Thursday, October 24 Antibiotics (Dr. Aoki & Dr. Zhanel) Professionalism - 3 hrs start 12:30 (Drs. Pauls & Goldberg) Student Affairs – Boundaries/Safety (Dr. Martin & Dr. Barakat) OR Int & Emerg Med:1500-1700 Procedures (2hrs) Shock (ER/ 1hr) Abdominal Pain (ER/1hr) CNS Emergencies (ER/ 1hr) 3:30 Toxicology(ER/ 1hr) Chest Pain ( Cardiology/1 hr) CHF( Cardiology/1 hr) Collaborative Patient Care (IPE) Thursday, October 31 (Dr.Dean) Scholarship in Medicine Project II (Drs. Ens, Littleford & Condon) Thursday, November 7 Motivation Pt. I &. II (Dr. Holmqvist) EXAM, Friday, November 8 (4 Exams) Thursday, November 14 Family Medicine, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Pediatrics, & Psychiatry Radiology (Dr. Mottola) Thursday, November 21 Inpatient Management Diabetes (Dr. Hurd) Thursday, November 28 Indigenous Health (Dr. Lavallee) OR Preliminary Electives Session Thursday, December 5 ECG (IM/ER 1 hr) ABG (IM/Nephro 1hr) Hypertension(IM/1hr) Delirium (IM/1hr) DVT/PE (Hematology/1hr) Anemia (Hematology/1hr) COPD/Asthma (Resp 1hr) Thyroid ( Endo 1hr) Elevated Serum Creatinine Electrolytes ( Nephro 2hrs) (Dr. Lee and Dr. Libich) Professionalism - 3 hrs Diarrhea (GI/1hr) 3:30 pm Syncope (IM/1hr) Scholarship in Medicine Project III Elevated Liver Enzymes(Hep/ 1hr) (Drs. Ens, Littleford & Condon) GI Bleeding (GI/1hr) start 12:30 (Drs. Pauls & Goldberg) Thursday, December 12 Thursday, December 19 Motivation Pt. III (Dr. Holmqvist) EXAM, Friday, December 20 (6 Exams) Arthritis ( Rheum/1hr) MCQ Q & A (IM 1hr) Family Medicine, Medicine, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Pediatrics, Psychiatry & Surgery UGME CuRe Clerkship - Med 3 5. SCHOLARSHIP in MEDICINE ACADEMIC PROJECT J. Littleford, S. Bruce, A. Condon, C. Ens Objectives: The graduating medical student will be able to: 1. Judge if a particular paper is one to which they should assign value 2. Have a sound strategy/method for answering clinical questions that arise in their practice 3. Embody the practice of evidence-based Med 3 Rotations Med 4 Block 1 2 3 4 Health Systems and Safety Community Health Sciences Health Systems and Safety Community Health Sciences Observational Study: Errors and Near Misses Information Prescription In development In development All disciplines Academic Paper Information Sciences Surgery & Anesthesia Regardless of which rotation students are in, the assignment framework in each block is identical Peds and OB Internal / Emerg Med FM & PH / Psych Regardless of which block students are in, the focus of each assignment relates directly to their rotation Information Sciences Health Systems and Safety OR Community Health Sciences Assignments relevant to content areas and academic structure Class #1 Class #2 Class #3 Interactive large group sessions Small group / tutorial sessions Student presentations SCHOLARSHIP in MEDICINE ACADEMIC PROJECT MED 3 EXAMPLE (CHS) A national study indicates that nearly half of all Canadian adults have difficulty understanding and using health information.1 Low health literacy - the inability to understand health information and to use that information to make good decisions about one’s health and medical care - is associated with more hospitalizations, greater use of emergency care, less preventive care, and poorer control of chronic illnesses.2 People with low health literacy make more mistakes with their medications, are less able to follow treatment instructions and experience more difficulties negotiating the healthcare system (filling out complex forms, locating providers & services) when compared to people with adequate literacy skills.2 According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project approximately 61% of adult Americans look online for health information and one in ten health inquiries have a major impact on someone’s health or the way they care for another.3 The situation is similar in Canada.4 Access to Internet health information has been reported to improve the way people take care of themselves, manage their illnesses, and help them make better, more informed choices.5 Physicians are in a position to direct their patients to resources containing current, reliable, consumer-friendly information about a health issue or concern.5-8 Offering an “information prescription” as a health care intervention provides a unique opportunity for patients to become more actively involved in their health and in the services they receive. Whether in the form of a pamphlet, website, noted on a prescription pad or included in a Facebook page, information prescriptions should direct patients to authoritative, high quality, and commercial-free information. They can be used to supplement face-to-face interaction and verbal/written information provided in the office or clinic. Information prescriptions have been shown to improve health literacy.9 The Public Health Association of Canada (PHAC) asserts that more emphasis needs to be placed on the promotion of health and on preventing or delaying chronic diseases, disabilities and injuries.9 To do so will “improve the quality of life of Canadians while reducing disparities in health and the impact these conditions have on individuals, families, communities, the health-care system and on society.” Five principles frame prevention activities in Canada: 1. Consider prevention is a priority 2. View prevention as a hallmark of a quality health system 3. Promote prevention as the first step in management 4. Approach health promotion in many ways 5. View health promotion as everybody’s business.10 An Information Prescription is a novel way to deliver concepts of prevention from a clinical perspective. In this block, students will learn about information prescriptions, methods to evaluate and present Internet and print media, sources of local population health data, statistics and community resources, and the role physicians can take in delivering prevention information. Students will make clinical observations to determine one event that could have been prevented in some way; they will then present their case in a small group session to broaden their scope of understanding; and they will create a Information Prescription wiki aimed at the general population to address their identified prevention issue. SiM Med 3: Creating an Information Prescription Pamphlet Will need to include: • Title that captures the prevention issue • Description of the prevention issue • Current policy / legislation around the issue • Local, provincial, or national statistics describing the issue • Related community organizations • Related websites, etc. Assessment: • Material to be presented in an engaging, educational, user-friendly manner at a grade 8 level or lower level (according to the Fry readability graph) • Text is grammatically correct, attribution is provided for pictures/graphics, one or two references are included where applicable, tables and graphs are included where appropriate • Content includes factual information, Manitoba data/statistics, community resources • Only highly rated, educational consumer health websites, applicable to the prevention issue, are cited (as judged by the HON code), etc. SCHOLARSHIP in MEDICINE ACADEMIC PROJECT MED 4 SiM Med 4 Assignment Students will pose a clinical question related to a scenario arising from Med IV clinical exposure and then show how the question is answered: 1. Convert a real clinical problem into an answerable (PICO) clinical question 2. Create this question from a real clinical scenario in one of the following disciplines, surgery, internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics, psychiatry, emergency medicine, ENT, ophthalmology, anesthesia, radiology 3. Conduct a well-constructed, focused search of the literature 4. Acquire and appraise articles. Synthesize the information. Select a relevant bibliography. 5. Prepare an academic paper, writing/citing & summarizing the findings and ANSWER the question 6. Justify a course of action based on the results – Physician to clinician experience – come to an evidence-based decision that will affect patients 7. Present the findings to colleagues in a small group – peer/facilitator evaluation according to a marking template Students watch eight 20-30 min prerecorded “green screen” videos given by Dr. S. Srinathan 4 Academic Half Days Academic Half Day Small group / tutorial sessions Student presentations SCHOLARSHIP in MEDICINE ACADEMIC PROJECT Med 4 : Pre-viewing done online during Electives (M6) Introduction to EBM & Critical Appraisal Asking questions Finding information Systematic review #1 Systematic review #2 RCTs Observational studies Guidelines, GRADE, Diagnostic studies Four Academic Half Days during TTR (M7) Mix of interactive whole group and small group sessions: First half hour - lecture Second/third hour - small groups of 15 members, defined by specialty of interest Final Session ( M7 April ) Student Presentations CLERKSHIP 2013: Year 3 (M5) 6. Student Evaluation FITER for all rotations >2 weeks • Surgery = one 6 week rotation with MITER after either 3 week general surgery or 3 week specialty rotation NBME: Surgery and Internal Med At end of each block ( ie 1 in block ) Peds/OG and Psych /Family Med At end of each 6 week rotation ( ie 2 per block) Academic half day /Longitudinal course/themes: Formative for class 2015 ( any new evaluation needs senate approval ) Scholarship in Medicine Academic Projects M5 & M7: passing mark (TBD )with evaluation rubrics for each assignment CLERKSHIP plans 2014:Year 4 (M6 & M7) 7. Transition to Residency Year 4 (M6 & M7): M6 – Electives pre CaRMS (14 weeks and 3 weeks interviews) ie no change M7 – Transition to Residency (11 weeks) Needs to be developed: • Academic time with LMCC review • Scholarship in Medicine project Med 4 • ACLS • Consider mandatory additional Core rotations: ie selective IM/ surgery / Community care • Selectives – palliative care, care of elderly, indigenous health, etc • Program tailored to specific residencies 39 UGME CuRe Clerkship - Med 3 Thank You………! Questions …………..comments ? WEBSITE……UM/Faculties/Medicine/Education http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/medicine/education/undergraduate/curriculum/curriculumrenewal.html 40