Title: Teaching and Assessing Medical Professionalism at Mayo Clinic
1Teaching and Assessing Medical Professionalism at
Mayo Clinic
- Paul S. Mueller, MD, MPH
- Associate Professor of Medicine
2Objectives
- Define professionalism
- Describe the rationale for teaching and assessing
professionalism - Describe methods for teaching and assessing
professionalism - Describe Mayo Clinic experiences with teaching
and assessing professionalism
3What is professionalism?
4Hallmarks of a profession
- Competence in a specialized body of knowledge
- Acknowledgment of specific duties and
responsibilities - Autonomy to train, admit, monitor, and discipline
its members a privilege granted by society
through licensure
5AAMCMedical School Objectives
- Physicians must be
- Altruistic
- Knowledgeable
- Skillful
- Dutiful
6Accreditation Council for GMEGeneral
competencieshttp//www.acgme.org/outcome/comp/com
pFull.asp5
7ABIM/ACPCharter on Medical ProfessionalismAnn
Intern Med 2002136243-246 and Ann Intern Med
2003138839-841
Less than 15 months after its release, the
Charter was endorsed by more than 90 specialty
societies.
8From Stern D., ed. Measuring Professionalism
(New York Oxford University Press, 2006).
8
9Professionalism at Mayo ClinicHistorical
perspective
Reflection
Communication
Teamwork
Altruism
Humanism
Excellence
- The best interest of the patient is the only
interest to be consideredand in order that the
sick may benefit from advancing knowledgea Union
of Forces is necessary - William J. Mayo, MDJune 1910
3000083-3
10Mayos primary valueThe needs of the patient
come first.
11Mayos missionMayo will provide the best care
to every patient every day through integrated
clinical practice, education, and research.
12The Mayo Clinic Model of Care
13What makes Mayo unique?
- Not smart physicians or breadth of science
- Rather
- Patient-centered care
- Multidisciplinary teamwork
- Allied health personnel
- Remarkable facilities
- Unique culture and ethos
14Should professionalism be taught?
15Patient expectionsIdeal physician behaviorsMayo
Clin Proc. 200681338-344.
- 192 patients in 14 specialty settings
- Confident engenders trust
- Empathetic Understands my feelings
- Humane compassionate and kind
- Personal patient is a person, not a disease
- Forthright Tells me what I need to know
- Respectful Takes my input seriously
- Thorough conscientious and persistent
16Mayo Clinic patient satisfaction
High correlation
High satisfaction
2006 PRC 3-Site Outpatient Satisfaction, n36500
17Reasons for concern
- Professionalism lapses
- Conflicts of interest among physicians common
- Declining trust in the medical profession
18Reasons for concern
- Unprofessional behavior in training associated
with later disciplinary action by licensing
boards (NEJM 20053532673-2682) - Nearly all physician leaders and nurses have
experienced disruptive physician behavior (Phys
Exec 2004Sept-Oct6-14, Am J Nurs
200510554-64, AORN J 200174317-331)
19Consequences of disruptive physician
behaviorhttp//cme.medscape.com/viewarticle/59031
9
- Reduced employee satisfaction, morale and
productivity and increased employee turnover - Reduced communication, teamwork, and efficiency
and increased costs - Decreased learner satisfaction, burnout,
depression and unprofessional behavior
20Reasons for optimism
21Professionalism can be taughtAdvancing
Education in Medical Professionalism. ACGME
Outcome Project, 2004.
- Formal and informal curricula influence
professional attitudes and beliefs, moral
reasoning, and behaviors - Role models influence attitudes and behavior
hidden curriculum
Professionalism is not simply innate.
22Professionalism is associated with important
outcomesAdvancing Education in Medical
Professionalism. ACGME Outcome Project, 2004.
- Increased patient satisfaction and trust
- Increased patient treatment adherence
- Patients more likely to stay with and recommend
physician - Fewer patient complaints
- Less patient litigation
- Overall physician excellence
23Should professionalism be taught? Yes.Advancing
Education in Medical Professionalism. ACGME
Outcome Project, 2004
- We are a profession
- AAMC, ACGME, ABIM, and JCAHO recommendations and
requirements - Expectations of patients and society
- Formal and informal curricula influence
professional attitudes and beliefs, moral
reasoning, and behaviors - Associated with important outcomes
24How do you teach professionalism?
25Consider the elements of professionalism.
From Stern D., ed. Measuring Professionalism
(New York Oxford University Press, 2006).
25
26Teaching professionalismMethodsAdvancing
Education in Medical Professionalism. ACGME
Outcome Project, 2004
- Lectures
- Discussion groups
- Role plays, simulation
- Experiential (eg, clinical setting)
- Team learning
- Role modeling
- Independent learning
27Teaching professionalismStrategiesJAMA
20012861067-1074
- Establish a climate of humanism
- Be practical and relevant
- Recognize and use seminal events
- Role model
- Encourage self-reflection
- Address the hidden curriculum
28Should professionalism be assessed? Yes.
- Professionalism can be assessed (Stern DT.
Measuring Professionalism Oxford, 2006) - Formative and summative feedback
- They dont respect what you expect they respect
what you inspect. (Cohen JJ. Forward. In
Measuring Professionalism Oxford, 2006) - Evaluate education programs
Failure to assess sends conflicting messages to
learners, physicians, and patients.
29How do you assess professionalism?
30Assessing professionalism Stern D, ed. Measuring
Professionalism Oxford, 2006
Most practicing physicians observe each others
behaviors only in the hallways and conference
rooms--rarely with patients. The solution to
this problem is to expand the number of observers
and the settings in which they observe.
31Effective assessment of professionalism Stern D,
ed. Measuring Professionalism Oxford, 2006JAMA
20083001326-1333
- Multiple observers and instruments
- Variety of settings
- Realistic context
- Situations that involve conflict
- Not overly stringent
- Transparency learners know purpose of assessment
- Symmetry all levels of the hierarchy are
assessed
32What do you do with the information?
- Formative feedback
- Summative feedback
- Reward exemplars
- Evaluate professionalism education programs and
generate research hypotheses
Using a professionalism portfolio
33Teaching and assessing professionalism at Mayo
- All levels
- Allied health staff
- Administrators
- Medical students
- Resident physicians and fellows
- Faculty
34Mayo Medical SchoolRequired (school year)
professionalism elements
- Bioethics core curriculum(1,3)
- Anatomy (1) cadaver as first patient, peer
review - Professionalism reflections (2)
- Safe Harbor professionalism program (3)
- Assessment (1-4)
- Peer and vertical
- Result portfolio on professionalism incorporated
into the Deans letter
35Mayo Medical SchoolElective
- Journal club
- MD Connect (new student publication)
- 1-month selective
36Mayo School of Graduate Medical
EducationResidency and fellowship training
- Required for all
- ACGME core competency for all programs
- Orientation module on professionalism
- Web-based curriculum in development
- DOM additional requirements
- Core curriculum
- MM ethics and professionalism sessions
- Professionalism OSCEs
- Assessment
37Assessing internal medicine resident
professionalism at Mayo
- Tests of knowledge
- OSCEs
- Mentor review of lapses
- Patient complaint review
- Electronic 360-degree assessments by peers,
senior residents, faculty, others - Result professionalism portfolio
38Electronic assessment
39Electronic assessment
These 2 questions have the highest inter-rater
reliability.
40Electronic assessment of professionalism at
MayoJAMA 20083001326-1333
- The mean score for top 20 (highly
professional) IM residents was 4.40, and for the
remainder was 4.02 (Plt.001) - High professionalism scores were associated with
greater knowledge, skills, and conscientious
behaviors
41Mayo facultyRequired
- Periodic web-based and interactive modules
- CALD program
- Professionalism module
- Communication module
- Note ABIM maintenance of certification
- Assessment attendance, learner
evaluations,360-degree reviews
42CALD professionalism module
- Reflective listening
- Attributes of professionalism
- Review data supporting professionalism
- Recognizing and responding to professional and
unprofessional behavior - Collaborate with a psychologist
- Feedback outstanding
43CALD professionalism module
44CALD communication module
- Communication a core competency
- Reflective listening re-emphasized
- 3-function model
- Relationship building
- Information gathering
- Patient education (eg, new diagnosis)
- Didactic, video vignettes, and role play
- Feedback outstanding
45CALD communication module
46Mayo facultyElective
- Professionalism conferences
- Annual ethics conference
- Medical grand rounds
47Mayo allied health staffMinnesota Medicine.
20079047-49.
- Nearly 3000 DOM allied health staff
- Didactic lectures, video vignettes, and role
plays - gt95 reported benefit
- Increased patient satisfaction in all divisions
48Teamwork is REAL
- The nexus of professionalism and quality is
teamwork - Enterprise-wide program
- Common language
- Outcomes measured
- Relationship building
- Effective communications
- Assertion
- Leading with mutual respect
49(No Transcript)
50Conclusions
- Medical professionalism is a core competency
- Professionalism is associated with important
clinical outcomes - Professionalism should be taught and assessed
- Professionalism can be taught, learned and
assessed
51Thank youmueller.pauls_at_mayo.edu
The best interest of the patient is the only
interest to be consideredand in order that the
sick may benefit from advancing knowledgea Union
of Forces is necessary