FASEB BioAdvances (Mar 2021)

Patient care, public health, and a pandemic: adapting educational experiences in the clinical years

  • Kirstin Nackers,
  • Amy Becker,
  • Katharina Stewart,
  • Mark Beamsley,
  • William Aughenbaugh,
  • Shobhina Chheda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1096/fba.2020-00090
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3
pp. 158 – 165

Abstract

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Abstract The University of Wisconsin Madison School of Medicine and Public Health rapidly adapted its four‐year, three‐phase medical doctorate clinical curriculum at the onset of the COVID‐19 in Spring 2020. Medical students in clinical rotations, our Phase 2 and 3 of the ForWard curriculum, temporarily stopped face to face care of patients, transitioning instead to online learning. For Phase 2 students, this single 12‐ week interim course included didactic content from all required integrated blocks and the creation of a new content which taught public health principles in the context of historical pandemics. Phase 3 students were rescheduled into online electives, which course directors had offered in the past and agreed to offer again during this time. All Phase 3 students participated in a Public Health Preparedness course after its rapid redesign for online delivery and scaling for an entire class. Phase 2 students returned in July 2020 to abbreviated 8‐week integrated blocks that retained approximately 83% of the clinical time students would have received in the intended 12‐week integrated blocks. This was possible through the frontloading of teaching sessions to the interim course and creative scheduling of clinical experiences. The 2015 curricular redesign to the integrated curriculum facilitated effective coordination and teamwork that enabled these thoughtful, rapid adjustments to the curriculum.

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