The medical education programs at ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½ School of Medicine are based on nine core competencies. The following competencies and Educational Program Objectives describe the knowledge, skills and behaviors a student must demonstrate to qualify for an MD degree.
Professionalism:
Demonstrates commitment to high standards of ethical, respectful, compassionate, reliable and responsible behaviors in all settings, and recognizes and addresses lapses in professional behavior.
- Meets obligations in a reliable and timely manner.
- Exhibits professional behavior or addresses lapses in professional behavior.
- Consistently demonstrates compassion, respect, honesty and ethical practices.
Teamwork and Interprofessional Collaboration:
Demonstrates knowledge, skills and attitudes to promote effective teamwork and collaboration with health care professionals across a variety of settings.
- Performs effectively as a member of a team.
- Respects and supports the contributions of individuals on an Interprofessional health care team to deliver quality care.
Reflective Practice:
Demonstrates habits of ongoing reflection and analysis to identify learning needs, increase self-awareness, and continuously improve performance and personal growth.
- Demonstrates habits of ongoing reflection using feedback from others as well as self-assessments to both identify learning needs (cognitive and emotional) and practice continuous quality improvement.
Interpersonal and Communication Skills:
Demonstrates effective listening, written and oral communication skills with patients, peers, faculty and other health care professionals in the classroom, research and patient care settings.
- Effectively communicates knowledge as well as uncertainties.
- Uses effective written and oral communication in clinical, research, and classroom settings.
- Demonstrates effective communication with patients using a patient-centered approach.
Knowledge for Practice:
Demonstrates knowledge of established and evolving biomedical, clinical, epidemiological and social-behavioral sciences as well as the application of this knowledge to patient care.
- Demonstrates appropriate level of clinical, basic, and health systems science knowledge to be an effective starting resident physician.
- Demonstrates ability to apply knowledge base to clinical and research questions.
Patient Care:
Demonstrates proficiency in clinical skills and clinical reasoning; engages in patient-centered care that is appropriate, compassionate and collaborative in promoting health and treating disease.
- Demonstrates knowledge, skills, and behaviors to perform history taking, physical examination and procedures appropriate to the level of training and clinical setting.
- Uses evidence from the patient’s history, physical exam, and other data sources for clinical reasoning to formulate management plans.
- Incorporates diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognostic uncertainty in clinical decision making and patient care discussions.
- Identifies and critically analyses relevant literature and practice-based guidelines to apply best evidence of patient care and management.
- Incorporates a patient’s perspective, values, context, and goals into all aspects of the clinical encounter.
Research and Scholarship:
Demonstrates knowledge and skills required to interpret, critically evaluate, and conduct research.
- Analyses and effectively critiques a broad range of research papers.
- Demonstrates ability to generate research questions and formulate methods to answer these questions.
- Demonstrates ability to initiate, complete and explain his/her research.
Personal and Professional Development:
Demonstrates the qualities required to sustain lifelong personal and professional growth.
- Critically reflects on personal values, priorities, and limitations to develop strategies that promote personal and professional growth.
- Recognizes when personal views and values differ from those of patients, colleagues, and other care givers and reflects on how these can affect patient care and research.
- Identifies challenges between personal and professional responsibilities and develops strategies to address them.
Systems-based Practice:
Demonstrates an understanding of and responsiveness to health care systems, as well as the ability to call effectively on resources to provide high value care.
- Applies knowledge of health care systems to patient care discussions.
- Demonstrates awareness of context of care, patients’ values, health care system, and environment in clinical care.
- Applies principles of quality improvement and safety to patient care.
Approved by Committee on Medical Education on July 27, 2023