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Draft New Title VII Legislation

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Title: Draft New Title VII Legislation


1
DraftNew Title VII Legislation
  • Presented at STFM Meeting
  • Seattle, Washington
  • May 2, 1999

2
New Title VII Legislation Health Professions
Education Partnerships Act of 1998
  • Division of Medicine
  • Bureau of Health Professions

3
Overview of Title VII Changes in Title
VII Relevance to Grant Reviewers Peer Review
Process
4
Title VII Purpose
  • To assist a public or nonprofit private hospital,
    school of medicine or osteopathy, or nonprofit
    entity to plan, develop, operate or participate
    in an approved professional training program in
    family medicine

5
Title VII Changes
  • 1. 44 separate BHPr programs consolidated into 7
    programs
  • 2. Funding priority in Academic Admin. Units
    program (Departments)
  • -- collaborative project between departments
  • of primary care
  • 3. GIM/GP program may offer funding for
    establishment of academic units
  • 4. Geriatrics included within family medicine
    faculty training authority

6
Title VII Changes Continued
  • 5. Funding priorities in residency training
    program
  • a. training disadvantaged and underrepresented
  • minorities
  • b. training the greatest percentages of
    providers
  • which enter remain in primary care practice
    or
  • show significant improvements

7
Title VII Changes Continued
  • 6. Special Consideration - prepare practitioners
    to care for underserved populations and other
    high-risk groups.
  • 7. Requirement to produce a plan for measuring
    outcomes

8
Title VII Changes Continued
  • 8. Authority for a Federal funds matching
    requirement
  • 9. Advisory Committee on Training in Primary Care
    Medicine Dentistry to be created

9
Primary Care Cluster FY 1999 Funding
  • Family Medicine 50,509,000
  • General Internal Medicine 18,125,000
  • and General Pediatrics

10
Administer New Legislation
  • To rescind all regulations
  • To create workgroup of consultants for each of
    the programs to advise on the implementation of
    the legislation

11
Four Legislative Implementation Workgroups
  • Academic Units
  • Faculty Development
  • Predoctoral
  • Residency

12
Family Medicine Representatives
  • Name
    Organization Workgroup
  • 1. Edward Bope, MD Riverside FPC/Ohio
    Residency
  • 2. John Dickinson, MD Univ. of Rochester
    Acad. Units
  • 3. John Frey, MD Univ. of WI Med.
    Sch. Predoctoral
  • 4. Larry Green, MD Univ. of Colorado
    Faculty
  • 5. Norman Kahn, MD AAFP
    Acad. Units
  • 6. Richard Lewan, MD Waukesha Fam. Prac.
    Residency
  • 7. David Marsland, MD Medical College of VA
    Acad. Units
  • 8. William Mygdal, EdD Faculty Develop. Ctr.
    Faculty
  • 9. Douglas Campos-
  • Outcalt, MD Maricopa County
    Predoctoral
  • 10. D. Ann Travis, MD Premier Medical Group
    Residency

13
Osteopathic Representatives
  • Name Organization
    Workgroup
  • 1. Michael Gallagher, DO Univ. of Med.
    Acad. Units

  • Dentistry of NJ
  • 2. Sarah Sprafka, PhD Univ. of NE of
    Faculty
  • Osteo. Med.
  • 3. Anthony Silvagni, DO Nova SE Univ.
    Predoctoral

  • Col. of Osteo Med.
  • 4. Michael Opipari, DO Health Horizon
    Residency

  • System

14
Program Focus - Academic Units
  • Family Medicine
  • To establish new departments of FM expand
    existing departments
  • To establish expand the research capability and
    infrastructure of such departments
  • GIM/GP
  • To establish new divisions of general internal
    medicine or general pediatrics
  • To expand the primary care education or primary
    care research of such divisions

15
Program Focus Predoctoral Training
  • Innovation
  • Centers of Excellence
  • Establishment or Expansion of Required Clerkships

16
Program Focus Residency Training
  • Emphasis is placed on national innovations aimed
    at primary care residency education across
    disciplines.
  • Innovation is defined as doing something new on a
    national level

17
Program Focus Faculty Development Training
  • Type 1 Primary Care Clinician Researcher
  • Fellowship
  • Type 2 Primary Care Master Educator
    Fellowship
  • Type 3 Primary Care Faculty Leadership
  • Development Fellowship/Training
  • Type 4 Community Preceptor Training

18
Project Requirements Academic Units
  • Family Medicine
  • 1. Clerkship - must have required 3rd year
    Clerkship or be proposing to establish Clerkship
  • 2. Leadership - Chair must be family physician
    project director named working
  • 3. Control of Resources - admin. autonomy
    comparable to other academic units
  • GIM/GP
  • 1. Leadership-IM/Ped head trained in primary care
  • 2. Control of Resources - admin. autonomy
    comparable to other academic units

19
Project Requirements Predoctoral Training
  • Family Medicine
  • Must have a family medicine academic unit
    required family medicine clerkship (of 4 weeks or
    more and prior to students MATCH choice) or
    propose to establish such clerkship
  • GIM/GP
  • Must have a division of GIM or GP

20
Project Requirements Residency Training
  • Family Medicine and GIM/GP
  • Provide the date and number of accreditation.
  • If the project director is not the program
    director, then include a substantive letter of
    support from the program director

21
Project Requirements Faculty Development Training
  • Family Medicine and GIM/GP
  • Will be incorporated into the body of the proposal

22
Review Criteria Academic UnitsScoring 0-100
  • Family Medicine and GIM/GP
  • Overall Quality (30)
  • Quality of Existing Proposed Faculty (20)
  • Quality of Specific Innovations Enhancing
  • the Research Program in Primary Care (20)
  • Overall Feasibility Institutional Support
    (20)
  • Contribution to Primary Care (10)

23
Review Criteria Predoctoral TrainingScoring
0-100
  • Family Medicine and GIM/GP
  • Overall Quality (20)
  • Faculty Leadership Qualifications
  • Faculty Diversity (15)
  • Institutional Support (15)
  • Curriculum Content (20)
  • Innovation (15)
  • Past Intended Outcomes,
  • Eval., Dissemination (15)

24
Review Criteria Residency TrainingScoring 0-100
  • Family Medicine and GIM/GP
  • General Quality (30)
  • Innovation (20)
  • Quality of Curriculum (20)
  • Feasibility (15)
  • External Validity (15)

25
Review Criteria Faculty Development
TrainingScoring 0-100
  • Family Medicine and GIM/GP
  • General Quality (30)
  • Project Leadership (10)
  • Faculty (20)
  • Curriculum (20)
  • Primary Care Focus (10)
  • Outcome Measures Dissemination (10)

26
Funding Preference
  • Medically Underserved Community (MUC)
  • This preference is given to applicants with a
    high rate for placing graduates in practice
    settings having the principal focus of serving
    residents of medically underserved communities
    or, during the previous two years, has achieved a
    significant increase in the rate of placing
    graduates in these settings.

27
MUC Preference
  • Predoctoral
  • High Rate
  • Percent reduced from 20 to 15
  • Significant Increase
  • Threshold lowered from 15 to 10 of graduates
    from the most recent year working in MUCs

28
MUC Preference
  • Residency
  • Significant Increase
  • Still requires a 50 increase, but now also
    requires a minimum of 2 graduates working in MUCs

29
Academic Units Preference
  • The establishment and also the substantial
    expansion of an Academic Unit is continued, but
    the language for the expansion criteria is now
    much clearer.

30
Academic UnitsTwo Funding Priorities
  • 1. Statutory Funding Priority for
  • a Collaborative Project
  • between departments of
  • primary care - 5 points

31
Academic UnitsTwo Funding Priorities
  • 2. Administrative Funding
  • Priority for Research
  • Infrastructure proposals
  • - 10 points

32
Residency ProgramTwo Funding Priorities
  • 1. Primary Care Priority
  • A record of training the greatest
  • percentage of providers, or
  • demonstrating significant improvements
  • in percentage of providers, which enter
  • remain in primary care practice
  • -- 10 priority points

33
Residency ProgramTwo Funding Priorities
  • To qualify for primary care priority
  • a) High Rate - Rate set at 75 1995 grads
  • counted in 1998, 1996 grads counted
  • in 1999 or
  • b) Significant Improvement - Rate of
  • primary care practice for 1996 grads
  • must be at least 50 greater than the
  • rate for 1995 grads AND a minimum of 2
  • 1996 grads or 30, whichever is greater,
  • is in primary care practice

34
Residency ProgramTwo Funding Priorities
  • 2. Disadvantaged Priority
  • A record of training individuals from
  • disadvantaged backgrounds (including
  • racial ethnic minorities underrepresented
  • in primary care practice)
  • a) 5 priority points
  • b) Report on current enrollees only
  • c) 20 rate to qualify

35
Relevance for Reviewers
  • Reviewer judgment more valued
  • Interdisciplinary peer reviews
  • Four separate applications
  • Changes in every program
  • Interdisciplinary applications
  • encouraged
  • Knowledge of funded activities

36
Primary Care Medical Education Branch Division of
Medicine, BHPr Parklawn Bldg., Rm. (9A-20) 5600
Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20857 Phone
301-443-1467 FAX 301-443-8890 FAMILY MEDICINE
PROGRAMS Residency Training Faculty
Development Ellie Grant
Elsie Quinones egrant_at_hrsa.gov
equinones_at_hrsa.gov Predoctoral Training
Academic Units Betty Ball
Lafayette Gilchrist bball_at_hrsa.gov
lgilchrist_at_hrsa.gov
37
Peer Review Process
  • Reviewers recommended to the Peer Review Branch
  • Diversity of reviewers
  • May serve for three years
  • Four to Six weeks to conduct review

38
Peer Review Process Contd
  • Group Orientation
  • Paradigm review of one application
  • If principal reviewer
  • -- Overview
  • -- Evaluation
  • -- Assign scores
  • Two additional reviewers
  • -- Comment and assign scores
  • Panel discussion, panel vote

39
Peer Review Process Contd
  • Budget Discussion
  • Vote on Budget
  • Vote on funding preferences/priorities
  • Reviewers summary is written

40
Draft Fiscal Year 2000Grant Review Schedule
  • Division of Material Applica- Peer
    Award
  • Medicine Download tion Review
    Peer Made
  • Programs From Web Deadline Mailout
    Review By
  • Residency 7/99 09/13/99
    10/22/99 12/06/99 06/30/00
  • Training
    12/13/99
  • Faculty 7/99
    10/22/99 12/03/99 01/18/00
    06/30/00
  • Development
  • Predoctoral 7/99 11/29/99
    01/04/00 02/14/00 06/30/00
  • Training
  • Academic 7/99 01/06/00
    02/18/00 04/10/00 09/30/00
  • Units

41
FY 2000 grant application materials available on
the Bureau of Health Professions (BHPr) Web page
on the Internet http//www.hrsa.dhhs.gov/bhpr/gra
nts.html Shelby Biedenkapp, M.S.W. Senior
Program Management Specialist PCMEB, DM,
BHPr 301-443-3615 sbiedenkapp_at_hrsa.gov
42
Fiscal Year 1998Budget
  • Departments 12 Million
  • Predoctoral 9.4 Million
  • Residency 13 Million
  • Faculty Development 9.2 Million
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