BMC Medical Education (Sep 2019)

Entrustable professional activity 7: opportunities to collaborate on evidence-based medicine teaching and assessment of medical students

  • Joey Nicholson,
  • Judy M. Spak,
  • Iris Kovar-Gough,
  • Elizabeth R. Lorbeer,
  • Nancy E. Adams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-019-1764-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background This study was conducted to examine gaps and opportunities for involvement of librarians in medical education and patient care as well as improve the teaching and assessment of Entrustable Professional Activity 7 (EPA 7) -- the ability to form clinical questions and retrieve evidence to advance patient care. Methods The Association of Academic Health Sciences Libraries (AAHSL) Competency-Based Medical Education Task Force surveyed all AAHSL member libraries in October 2016 on health sciences librarian awareness and involvement in teaching and assessing EPA 7. Results The survey response rate was 54% (88/164 member libraries). While 90% (n = 76) of respondents were regularly engaged in teaching or assessing aspects of EPA 7 only 34 (39%) were involved explicitly in a Core EPA 7 project, 44% (15/34) of these projects were librarian initiated. Conclusions Involvement in teaching and assessment of EPA 7 is an untapped opportunity for librarians to collaborate in medical education and patient care. Although librarians are already deeply involved in teaching and assessment of EPA 7 related knowledge, skills, and behaviors, further librarian collaboration can help bolster the planning or updating of existing curricula and assessments of this entrustable professional activity.

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