Description
Practicing evidence-based medicine is widely regarded both as best clinical practice, and as the cornerstone of meeting the ACGME competencies in Practice-Based Learning and Improvement. Training programs recognize the need to teach the skills of EBM and yet struggle with readily available content and guidance on putting together a curriculum. Time frames for delivering curricula in residency can be very tight, often restricted to scattered one hour conferences. This book provides a modular curriculum structure for instructors, with each topic area taking up one section, or one hour of instructional time.
Developed over the past 14 years as an introductory course for interns in the internal medicine residency program at Duke, the curriculum will cover core content areas in evidence-based medicine and best teaching practices for them and skills such as literature searching and applying evidence to patients. Most importantly, it will center on actual patient questions and use current literature as examples that instructors can use as teaching exercises. There will also be ample diagrams that have been shown to be effective with learners and each module will include a video tutorial of a sample teaching session, including visual aids and small group teaching techniques. The curriculum can be implemented in any time frame necessary, compressed or longitudinal, to a variety of learners.
This is an ideal guide for residency program directors and core faculty, either within internal medicine or more broadly in family medicine, pediatrics, surgery, OB-gyn, as well as medical school faculty for use with students.
Author: Daniella A. Zipkin
Publisher: Springer
Published: 12/24/2022
Pages: 194
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.75lbs
Size: 8.98h x 5.75w x 0.39d
ISBN13: 9783031111730
ISBN10: 3031111737
BISAC Categories:
- Medical | Internal Medicine
- Education | General
About the Author
Daniella A. Zipkin MD is Associate Professor of Medicine and Associate Program Director for Ambulatory Care in the Internal Medicine Residency at the Duke University Health System. She is also a core faculty member of Duke's national Teaching and Leading Evidence-Based Medicine annual workshop and has won a number of awards for her teaching and clinical work at Duke. She is also a member of the SGIM Education Committee and Career Working Group, as well as former Chair of the Evidence-Based Medicine Task Force.