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An Internal Medicine Residency Hospitalist Pathway: A 2-year Follow Up
Author(s) -
Andrea Smeraglio,
Andre Kumar,
Rajani Kaimal,
Surbhi Singhal,
Jingkun Yang,
Ronald Witteles,
Neera Ahuja
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
mededpublish
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2312-7996
DOI - 10.15694/mep.2019.000104.1
Subject(s) - mentorship , excellence , curriculum , medicine , program director , family medicine , patient care , medline , hospital medicine , medical education , nursing , psychology , pedagogy , political science , law
This article was migrated. The article was not marked as recommended. Purpose: The Stanford Hospitalist Advanced Practice and Education (SHAPE) Program was established in 2015 as a hospital medicine training track within an academic internal medicine residency program. It is unique because it was created and is currently run by residents with a goal of better preparing residents for careers in hospital medicine. The SHAPE curriculum is based on three principles: (1) clinical excellence in hospitalist-relevant clinical areas, (2) academic development through research and quality improvement, and (3) career mentorship. We provide a two-year follow-up since the establishment of SHAPE and resident attitudes toward the program's effectiveness. Methods: We assessed resident attitudes toward the SHAPE Program and subjective readiness to begin practice via electronic survey from 2015 to 2017. Results: 154 out of 324 (47.5%) total internal medicine residents responded to the surveys. Of those, 17 out of 21 (81.0%) were members of SHAPE. Compared to non-hospitalist-bound residents, SHAPE residents reported improved readiness for independent practice (OR 3.39 [95% CI: 1.1-10.9]) and providing care within the specific domain of palliative care. Conclusions: Here we describe the challenges of maintaining a hospitalist curriculum and the successes that have come from the first resident-run hospitalist training program in the country.

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