Entrustable Professional Activities in final year undergraduate medical training - advancement of the final year training logbook in Germany

  • Pascal O Berberat
  • Thomas Rotthoff
  • Christoph Baerwald
  • Maren Ehrhardt
  • Bert Huenges
  • Jonas Johannink
  • Elisabeth Narciss
  • Udo Obertacke
  • Harm Peters
  • Martina Kadmon

Abstract

Objective: Training in the final year (FY) of undergraduate medical training currently does not adequately prepare students for the independent performance of medical professional activities after graduation. The concept of Entrustable Professional Activities (EPA) offers the opportunity for a competency-based FY training with the focus on medical professional activities. Methodology: In regular meetings, the FY sub-working group of the German Medical Faculty Association (MFT), which includes representatives with clinical and didactic expertise of the Associations of Internal Medicine, Surgery and General Medicine, developed a concept for the competecy-orientated, EPA-based, FY model logbook 2.0. The selection of the units of practice was made in a cross-disciplinary, consensus-orientated discussion process based on the question which medical professional activities a young professional has to master in the inpatient or outpatient working environment. Results: For the FY electives internal medicine, surgery and general medicine, a blueprint of a total of 18 comprehensive, partially interdisciplinary EPAs relating to inpatient and outpatient care contexts were developed. Each EPA was operationalised by a short description, supervision levels were attributed, and the process of transparent entrustment was determined. Conclusions: The concept for a new FY model logbook 2.0 focuses on the interdisciplinary core medical professional activities in an inpatient and outpatient care context, in order to facilitate transition from undergraduate training to professional practice, and to help avoid overload, thus increasing patient safety.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN2366-5017
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2019
PubMed 31844642