Medical Education Online (Apr 2011)

Development of a longitudinal integrated clerkship at an academic medical center

  • Ann Poncelet,
  • Seth Bokser,
  • Brook Calton,
  • Karen E. Hauer,
  • Heidi Kirsch,
  • Tracey Jones,
  • Cindy J. Lai,
  • Lindsay Mazotti,
  • William Shore,
  • Arianne Teherani,
  • Lowell Tong,
  • Maria Wamsley,
  • Patricia Robertson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3402/meo.v16i0.5939
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 0
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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In 2005, medical educators at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), began developing the Parnassus Integrated Student Clinical Experiences (PISCES) program, a year-long longitudinal integrated clerkship at its academic medical center. The principles guiding this new clerkship were continuity with faculty preceptors, patients, and peers; a developmentally progressive curriculum with an emphasis on interdisciplinary teaching; and exposure to undiagnosed illness in acute and chronic care settings. Innovative elements included quarterly student evaluation sessions with all preceptors together, peer-to-peer evaluation, and oversight advising with an assigned faculty member. PISCES launched with eight medical students for the 2007/2008 academic year and expanded to 15 students for 2008/2009. Compared to UCSF's traditional core clerkships, evaluations from PISCES indicated significantly higher student satisfaction with faculty teaching, formal didactics, direct observation of clinical skills, and feedback. Student performance on discipline-specific examinations and United States Medical Licensing Examination step 2 CK was equivalent to and on standardized patient examinations was slightly superior to that of traditional peers. Participants’ career interests ranged from primary care to surgical subspecialties. These results demonstrate that a longitudinal integrated clerkship can be implemented successfully at a tertiary care academic medical center.

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