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      Beyond information retrieval and electronic health record use: competencies in clinical informatics for medical education

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          Abstract

          Physicians in the 21st century will increasingly interact in diverse ways with information systems, requiring competence in many aspects of clinical informatics. In recent years, many medical school curricula have added content in information retrieval (search) and basic use of the electronic health record. However, this omits the growing number of other ways that physicians are interacting with information that includes activities such as clinical decision support, quality measurement and improvement, personal health records, telemedicine, and personalized medicine. We describe a process whereby six faculty members representing different perspectives came together to define competencies in clinical informatics for a curriculum transformation process occurring at Oregon Health & Science University. From the broad competencies, we also developed specific learning objectives and milestones, an implementation schedule, and mapping to general competency domains. We present our work to encourage debate and refinement as well as facilitate evaluation in this area.

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          The path to personalized medicine.

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            Toward a common taxonomy of competency domains for the health professions and competencies for physicians.

            Although health professions worldwide are shifting to competency-based education, no common taxonomy for domains of competence and specific competencies currently exists. In this article, the authors describe their work to (1) identify domains of competence that could accommodate any health care profession and (2) extract a common set of competencies for physicians from existing health professions' competency frameworks that would be robust enough to provide a single, relevant infrastructure for curricular resources in the Association of American Medical Colleges' (AAMC's) MedEdPORTAL and Curriculum Inventory and Reports (CIR) sites. The authors used the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)/American Board of Medical Specialties six domains of competence and 36 competencies delineated by the ACGME as their foundational reference list. They added two domains described by other groups after the original six domains were introduced: Interprofessional Collaboration (4 competencies) and Personal and Professional Development (8 competencies). They compared the expanded reference list (48 competencies within eight domains) with 153 competency lists from across the medical education continuum, physician specialties and subspecialties, countries, and health care professions. Comparison analysis led them to add 13 "new" competencies and to conflate 6 competencies into 3 to eliminate redundancy. The AAMC will use the resulting "Reference List of General Physician Competencies" (58 competencies in eight domains) to categorize resources for MedEdPORTAL and CIR. The authors hope that researchers and educators within medicine and other health professions will consider using this reference list when applicable to move toward a common taxonomy of competencies.
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              The top patient safety strategies that can be encouraged for adoption now.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Adv Med Educ Pract
                Adv Med Educ Pract
                Advances in Medical Education and Practice
                Advances in Medical Education and Practice
                Dove Medical Press
                1179-7258
                2014
                01 July 2014
                : 5
                : 205-212
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Medical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA
                [2 ]Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA
                [3 ]Department of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA
                [4 ]School of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA
                Author notes
                Correspondence: William R Hersh, Department of Medical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology, School of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd, BICC, Portland, OR, USA, Tel +1 503 494 4563, Email hersh@ 123456ohsu.edu
                Article
                amep-5-205
                10.2147/AMEP.S63903
                4085140
                25057246
                68627b58-f8b7-4247-8c1d-d98cc4b65f83
                © 2014 Hersh et al. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License

                The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.

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                curriculum transformation,clinical decision support,patient safety,health care quality,patient engagement

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