scholarly journals A ‘How-To-Guide’ for teaching and assessing Collaborator Role competencies in family medicine residency and health professional training programs

2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 503
Author(s):  
Christie Newton ◽  
Deborah Kopansky-Giles ◽  
Alison Eyre ◽  
Steve Balkou
2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 362-370
Author(s):  
Mark Stoutenberg ◽  
Byron J. Powell ◽  
Paolo J. Busignani ◽  
Allison H. Bowersock ◽  
Rachele Pojednic

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 879-883
Author(s):  
Andrea Roberts ◽  
Nancy R. Angoff ◽  
David Brissette ◽  
David Dupee ◽  
Deborah Fahs ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 369-373
Author(s):  
Michelle E. Hauser ◽  
Julia R. Nordgren ◽  
Maya Adam ◽  
Christopher D. Gardner ◽  
Tracy Rydel ◽  
...  

Providing a strong foundation in culinary medicine (CM)—including what constitutes a healthy diet and how to find, obtain, and prepare healthy and delicious food—is a cornerstone of educating health professionals to support patients in achieving better health outcomes. The Culinary Medicine Curriculum (CMC), published in collaboration with the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, is the first, comprehensive, open-source guide created to support the implementation of CM at health professional training programs (HPTPs) worldwide. The CMC is modeled after the successful CM elective course for Stanford University School of Medicine students. Key goals of the CMC include presenting healthy food as unapologetically delicious, quick, and inexpensive; translating lessons learned to healthy eating on-the-go; practicing motivational interviewing on healthy dietary behavior changes; and demonstrating how to launch a CM course. The CMC highlights a predominantly whole food, plant-based diet as seen through the lenses of different world flavors and culinary traditions. It was developed, published, and distributed with the aim of expanding CM by reducing barriers to creating CM courses within most types of HPTPs and practice settings. During the first 2 months the CMC was available, it was downloaded 2379 times in 83 countries by a wide variety of health care professionals interested in teaching CM. The global interest in this first, freely available, evidence-based CMC underscores the demand for CM resources. Such resources could prove foundational in expediting development of CM courses and expanding the reach of CM and counseling on dietary behavior changes into patient care.


Conatus ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 287
Author(s):  
Mark A. Levine ◽  
Matthew K. Wynia ◽  
Meleah Himber ◽  
William S. Silvers

The participation of physicians in the atrocities of the Holocaust exposed vulnerabilities in medicine’s moral commitment to patients’ best interests that every health professional should recognize. Teaching about this history is challenging, as it is extremely complex and there are no common standards for what basic historical facts students in health professions training programs should learn. Nor is there guidance on how these historical facts can or should be related to contemporary ethical issues facing health professionals. To address these problems, we propose a set of core historical facts about health professional involvement in the Holocaust that every student in a health professional training program should learn. We then identify three ethical lessons from the Holocaust that are pertinent today as physicians struggle to maintain their moral compass and earn the trust of patients and the public: 1) The lesson of commitment to science; maintaining balance between reason and skepticism in the search for truth, (2) The lesson of clinical detachment; maintaining balance between necessary professional distance with a commitment to humanism and intimacy with patients, and 3) The lesson of competing loyalties; maintaining balance in upholding medicine’s multiple responsibilities, including to individual patients and the larger community. Embedding these facts and lessons into the education of health professionals is challenging yet critically important. Today’s physicians struggle with some of the same ethical tensions as did German physicians in the Nazi era, albeit in a much-attenuated fashion. Awareness of these tensions and taking active measures to maintain them in balance are necessary components of humanistic health care, which should be an integral part of health professional training programs.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 473-484
Author(s):  
Juan Carlos Arango-Lasprilla ◽  
Laiene Olabarrieta-Landa ◽  
Melissa M. Ertl ◽  
Lillian Flores Stevens ◽  
Alejandra Morlett-Paredes ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-70
Author(s):  
Claire M. Edwards ◽  
Jason M. Newell

The focus on interprofessional education (IPE) for professional training programs in allied health professions such as social work has increased recently. There is limited pedagogical literature regarding either the instruction or application of IPE in any given profession. Based on a co-teaching model of instruction, this article delineates the preparation and integration process of a pilot course on IPE. The pilot course was taught at a small liberal arts college where it was cross-listed in two undergraduate professional programs in social work and speech-language pathology. This article discusses the relevance of including IPE in allied health professional training programs. Additionally, this article outlines the timeline for developing and implementing the course, from conceptualization to the integration phases including implications from student evaluations of their experience in the course. Elements of the course including delivery, descriptions of assignments, and projects also are discussed.


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