Grades for the preclinical courses are as follows: Honors in 6, Near Honors in 4 and Satisfactory in 1.

Similar documents
THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER AT HOUSTON MCGOVERN MEDICAL SCHOOL CATALOG ADDENDUM

Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship Program Frequently Asked Questions

THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER AT HOUSTON MCGOVERN MEDICAL SCHOOL CATALOG ADDENDUM

Immersion Phase. Phase Directors Bill Cutrer, M.D., M.Ed. Lourdes Estrada, Ph.D. Program Manager Brenna Hansen

Program Curriculum. Organ Systems Block 2 Neuro/Behavior/MS/Derm. Comprehensive Assessment 1 week. Modules weeks

UVM Rural Health Longitudinal Integrated Curriculum Hudson Headwaters Health Network, Queensbury, New York

American College of Emergency Physicians National Emergency Medicine Medical Student Award Nomination Form. Due Date: February 14, 2012

CHA/PA Newsletter. Exploring the Field of Hospitalist Medicine. CHA/PA Fall Banquet

ACADEMIC POLICIES FOR THE MD DEGREE

Physician Assistant Studies

PREPARING FOR THE SITE VISIT IN YOUR FUTURE

THE UNIVERSITY OF THE WEST INDIES Faculty of Medical Sciences, Mona. Regulations

School of Basic Biomedical Sciences College of Medicine. M.D./Ph.D PROGRAM ACADEMIC POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

Global Health Kitwe, Zambia Elective Curriculum

Indicators Teacher understands the active nature of student learning and attains information about levels of development for groups of students.

Fearless Change -- Patterns for Introducing New Ideas

EMORY UNIVERSITY. SCHOOL OF MEDICINE. Emory School of Medicine records,

BIENNIUM 1 ELECTIVES CATALOG. Revised 1/17/2017

GUIDELINES FOR COMBINED TRAINING IN PEDIATRICS AND MEDICAL GENETICS LEADING TO DUAL CERTIFICATION

Section 6: Academic Affairs -

Third Year Book Piscataway-New Brunswick. Page 1 of 17

Academic Catalog

REGULATION RESPECTING THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR THE ISSUANCE OF THE PERMIT AND SPECIALIST'S CERTIFICATES BY THE COLLÈGE DES MÉDECINS DU QUÉBEC

FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM FELLOW APPLICATION

Tools to SUPPORT IMPLEMENTATION OF a monitoring system for regularly scheduled series

Information Pack: Exams Officer. Abbey College Cambridge

Curriculum Vitae of. JOHN W. LIEDEL, M.D. Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrician

Modified Systematic Approach to Answering Questions J A M I L A H A L S A I D A N, M S C.

Awards Convocation & Pearls Lectures

Exemplar Grade 9 Reading Test Questions

IMSH 2018 Simulation: Making the Impossible Possible

Queen's Clinical Investigator Program: In- Training Evaluation Form

Phase 3 Standard Policies and Procedures

Basic Standards for Residency Training in Internal Medicine. American Osteopathic Association and American College of Osteopathic Internists

Mayo School of Health Sciences. Clinical Pastoral Education Residency. Rochester, Minnesota.

Paramedic Science Program

Loyola University Chicago ~ Archives and Special Collections

Integrating the Learner into the Busy Practice

Assessing Digital Identity and Promoting Online Professionalism: Social Media and Medical Education

E N H A N C I N G C O M M U N I T Y P E D I A T R I C S T R A I N I N G

Name in full: Last First Middle. Telephone: Day Evening Social Security No.: Internship: Dates of Start and Completion. Name and Address of Hospital:

KENTUCKY FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING

Graduate/Professional School Overview

SMARTboard: The SMART Way To Engage Students

AnMed Health Family Medicine Residency Program Curriculum and Benefits

Parent Information Welcome to the San Diego State University Community Reading Clinic

Oklahoma State University Policy and Procedures

Graduate Program in Education

THE BROOKDALE HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER ONE BROOKDALE PLAZA BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11212

Duke University. Trinity College of Arts & Sciences/ Pratt School of Engineering Application for Readmission to Duke

The One Minute Preceptor: 5 Microskills for One-On-One Teaching

BIOH : Principles of Medical Physiology

John W. Norbury, 1 Clinton E. Faulk, 1 Kelly M. Harrell, 2 Luan E. Lawson, 3 and Daniel P. Moore Introduction

Medical educators are growing

Mayo School of Health Sciences. Clinical Pastoral Education Internship. Rochester, Minnesota.

Medical Student Education Committee. MSEC Minutes: August 18, 2015

BUSINESS HONORS PROGRAM

MYCIN. The MYCIN Task

What is an internship?

SPECIALIST PERFORMANCE AND EVALUATION SYSTEM

THE FIELD LEARNING PLAN

Perioperative Care of Congenital Heart Diseases

Author's response to reviews

Arizona GEAR UP hiring for Summer Leadership Academy 2017

Qualitative Site Review Protocol for DC Charter Schools

TASK 2: INSTRUCTION COMMENTARY

Hawai i Pacific University Sees Stellar Response Rates for Course Evaluations

Class of 2013 Honors Award Winners

Holyoke Community College

Developing an Assessment Plan to Learn About Student Learning

REPORT OF THE PROVOST S REVIEW PANEL. Clinical Practices and Research in the Department of Neurological Surgery June 27, 2013

LS 406: Classroom Experience

The role of the physician primarily

Global Health Interprofessional Program Summer Zambia

Alma Primary School. School report. Summary of key findings for parents and pupils. Inspection dates March 2015

Living on Campus. Housing and Food Services

Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. Institutional Policies and Procedures For Graduate Medical Education Programs

ACTION LEARNING: AN INTRODUCTION AND SOME METHODS INTRODUCTION TO ACTION LEARNING

Writing Unit of Study

VI-1.12 Librarian Policy on Promotion and Permanent Status

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Update on the Next Accreditation System Drs. Culley, Ling, and Wood. Anesthesiology April 30, 2014

Post doc Post. Last year s achievements and coming next, by Alberto Caban-Martinez...

Just Because You Can t Count It Doesn t Mean It Doesn t Count: Doing Good Research with Qualitative Data

Alyson D. Stover, MOT, JD, OTR/L, BCP

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SAN MARCOS SCHOOL OF EDUCATION

Sample Letter Of Teamwork Recommendation

The Consistent Positive Direction Pinnacle Certification Course

TEAM-BUILDING GAMES, ACTIVITIES AND IDEAS

STUDENTS' RATINGS ON TEACHER

Marketing Management MBA 706 Mondays 2:00-4:50

Paraprofessional Evaluation: School Year:

TRI-STATE CONSORTIUM Wappingers CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT

FACTS. & Figures. University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System

How to make an A in Physics 101/102. Submitted by students who earned an A in PHYS 101 and PHYS 102.

Collegiate Academies Response to Livingston School Facility RFA Submitted January 23, 2015

San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium

ACCT 3400, BUSN 3400-H01, ECON 3400, FINN COURSE SYLLABUS Internship for Academic Credit Fall 2017

DIOCESE OF PLYMOUTH VICARIATE FOR EVANGELISATION CATECHESIS AND SCHOOLS

UIC HEALTH SCIENCE COLLEGES

Transcription:

John Doe Medical Student Performance Evaluation School of Medicine Undergraduate Medical Education Mail code: CL5MD 2730 SW Moody Ave. Portland, OR 97201 tel 503 494-8228 fax 503 494-3400 Office of Admissions tel 503 494-8220 INTRODUCTION John Doe has applied to your program for residency training from Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine located in Portland, Oregon. This letter will help you to interpret the student s academic abilities and personal characteristics, as well as to better appreciate important aspects of the medical education program. While grade point averages and numerical class ranking are not calculated for our students, it is hoped that this letter, the academic transcript and other letters of recommendation will enable you to make a thorough assessment. Continuing Medical Education Mail code: L602 tel 503 494-8700 fax 503 494-0392 Development and Alumni Relations tel 503 494-0723 fax 503 418-1025 Graduate Medical Education Mail code: L579 tel 503 494-8652 fax 503 494-8513 Graduate Studies tel 503 494-6222 ACADEMIC HISTORY Matriculation: Monday, August 15, 2011 Expected Graduation: June 12, 2016. The student will have participated in 161 weeks of required teaching. Combined Degree: None Leaves of Absences: John took a leave of absence to pursue research from September of 2014 through June of 2015. Other Actions: None ACADEMIC PROGRESS PRECLINICAL RECORD The preclinical curriculum consists of multi-disciplinary units in the basic medical sciences beginning with a focus on normal structure and function and concluding with an emphasis on disease processes and their management. The Principles of Clinical Medicine course addresses a spectrum of health care issues important to physicians and society, provides patient examination skills development, and a continuity clinical preceptorship experience throughout the first and second years. Grades for the preclinical courses are as follows: Honors in 6, Near Honors in 4 and Satisfactory in 1.

EVALUATION COMMENTS FROM PHYSICIAN PRECEPTORS IN YEARS 1 & 2 INCLUDE: John is a very strong student. He is clearly quite bright and learns well through observation. He is an active participant in his medical education and is readily able to apply what he learns. His clinical curiosity is good. He does an excellent job with independent learning and investigates what he does not know. CLINICAL CLERKSHIP COMMENTS AS RECEIVED FROM DEPARTMENT (The following are excerpts taken from the Student s evaluations) Internal Medicine Honors Summer 2013-2014 John showed great maturity for a third year student when he paused when the patient identified a very hard experience, validating the patient s feelings and giving him a moment before moving on Jordan s strong suit is his ability to get the story. He did this because he is a good listener and also heard what the story details in context to what the patient values. He is (also) good at the physical exam and seems curious about it. John consistently provided excellent, well-thought out and professional presentations on rounds. He was able to focus on the salient points and provide the appropriate information to allow the team to assess the patient appropriately. As he becomes more confident and less nervous, he will shine even more as the content is excellent. In fact, one attending who noted this stated that she noted superb progress and building of confidence in John to the point of excellent to outstanding presentations after our two week time together. By the end of the clerkship, Jordan s progress notes had become targeted, sequenced well, reflected team s thinking and yet Jordan s own thinking. One of his OHSU attendings wrote that most amazing to me was Jordan s ability to manage tough questions posed to him by difficult patients while he was presenting. He did this better than many residents. The reason I think is because John focused on the patient s words and could reframe what was posed in the moment and yet really still listen John is a wonderful learner, curious, activated, well-read and responsive to information in his assessments and plans. One recent MGH resident, now OHSU attending, wrote that John went far and above what I have seen from sub-is, residents or attendings. Did not just hit the two required and stop John understands the relationship between clinical problems and the plan. In summary, John is an exemplary student who performed in an outstanding manner, especially after getting his nerves under control. He showed a lot of higher level clinical reasoning skills and potential for further and probably rapid growth on his already very firm foundation after just his first clerkship.

Psychiatry Near Honors Fall 2013-2014 John is a reliable, professional and motivated student who demonstrated consistent improvement over the course of the rotation. He demonstrated good rapport with patients, his oral presentations and written documentation were good and he definitely was an asset to our multidisciplinary team. He sought out and was responsive to feedback on his performance. He demonstrated an appropriate fund of knowledge for a 3rd year medical student. He establishes phenomenal rapport with patients. Pediatrics Near Honors Fall 2013-2014 John is an excellent medical student, often operating at the level of an intern. He displayed eagerness toward learning and patient care and assisted the team on daily rounds. John is professional, competent, smart and well spoken. He gave thoughtful presentations, reporting information accurately and developing thoughtful impressions. John quickly picked up the ability to include pertinent positives and negatives and seemed very at ease presenting in front of patients and families. He has a calm, professional bedside manner and was a positive member of the team. He worked on committing to management plans and this skill matured. Patient write-ups were very good as was a presentation on endocardial cushion defects. He had well formulated assessments, was able to come to thoughtful differential diagnoses, and often had plans formulated that were above and beyond his peers at the same level of training. He also formed good relationships with his patients and their families. He will be an excellent resident in whatever field he chooses. Surgery Honors Winter 2013-2014 John did an outstanding job on the Surgery 720 rotation. His fund of knowledge was above peers for his level of training based on the exam. John gave an overall excellent performance during the rotation. He was very hard working and thorough with presentations. His history write ups were always well done. John was truly a stellar medical student. He was prepared on the wards, in clinic, and in the operating room. He has an excellent attitude and was eager to learn. He was always trying to read as much as possible about the patient and specific diseases. His ability to summarize and analyze was impressive. He knew anatomy to a level we haven t seen in years. His presentations were those of a very experienced resident. He took good care of his patients. He s also very humble and doesn t show up the other medical students. He integrates well into the team and cares for his patients. Obstetrics & Gynecology Honors Winter 2013-2014 John took initiative to manage every patient on the service and did it with ease. He was always helpful and willing to go above and beyond for both the patients and furthering his own knowledge. I worked with John during the 2-week Gynecology Oncology portion of his OB/GYN rotation. He operated at the level of a sub-i during his Gyn Oncology rotation. He was interested, very well read, and knew every answer to the difficult questions asked by attendings in the operating room. His technical skill as an assistant was very welcome in the operating room, and he served as a better assistant than most of our interns. He had wonderful hands and was adept at his subcuticular suturing. He had the knowledge and clinical acumen of an experienced sub-i. He was consistently prepared for rounds and clinic and was appropriately active in the OR. Eager to provide great care and learn and very sensitive to patient needs as well as needs of colleagues. Seeks feedback and integrates it immediately. Rural Health Honors Spring 2013-2014 Dr. Naqvi noted John was one of the more exceptional students I have had the pleasure of precepting. Whatever field he chooses for a career, he will do very well. The overall evaluation by the preceptor of Jordan s clerkship in Florence was Honors. John handled all aspects of communication and referrals with a good level of understanding of community resources and was quick to recognize the limited resources of rural health care.

Family Medicine Honors Spring 2013-2014 John was amazing. He had a calm professional demeanor and worked well with staff and patients alike. He was well read, interested in learning, brought in topics to discuss, was helpful with the routine work of the clinic and made himself available. He was absolutely superior in every single skill. I look forward to seeing him develop his skills and I have no doubts that he will be a great physician! PROFESSIONALISM ASSESSMENT Outlined below are the professionalism standards assessed during each of the required clerkships: Honesty and Integrity: Dependable for reporting accurate information; handles confidential information appropriately; and accepts responsibility for their assigned role in the care of patients and the clerkship. Respect for Others and Teamwork: Avoids arrogance toward others; behaves in a respectful manner to people with differing beliefs and personalities; collegially works with nurses and other professionals; demonstrates respect for other learners; and appropriately attributes sources of information in written products. Respect for Patients: Demonstrates compassion for patients and appropriately advocates for patients needs. After final assessment, John Doe has met the OHSU School of Medicine professionalism expectations. UNIQUE CHARACTERISTICS John is a well-rounded and exceptional student who has consistently applied himself in medical research, volunteer work and leadership throughout medical school. Notably, John is an active research scholar and contributor to medical literature. He has authored multiple published articles, abstracts and conference presentations while in medical school. John is a passionate volunteer at the Southwest Community Clinic of Portland, and an adept teacher leading tutoring workshops in pathophysiology and suturing courses. John has been an active leader as OHSU representative of the Oregon Institute for Health Improvement chapter. John is a running enthusiast, competing in

local races/marathons, and enjoys mountaineering, cross-country skiing, film photography and flyfishing. SUMMARY John was elected to Alpha Omega Alpha as a Senior. Students at Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine are recommended as candidates for postdoctoral training in four categories based upon an evaluation of their overall academic performance. This final assessment is based on a relative weighting of 33% for performance in the preclinical curriculum and 66% performance in the core clinical clerkships. The categories include: Outstanding (29), Excellent (41), Very Good (35), and Good (28). Following careful consideration by the Residency Advisory committee, John Doe has been recommended as an Outstanding candidate. Sincerely, Tracy Bumsted, M.D., M.P.H. Nicole Deiorio, M.D. Ben Schneider, M.D. Associate Dean for Undergraduate Assistant Dean for Assistant Dean for Medical Education Student Affairs Student Affairs P.S. If you have specific questions regarding this applicant, Dr. Bumsted can be reached at 503-494-8228 or bumstedt@ohsu.edu. Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine Class of 2016 Third Year Curriculum Internal Medicine 10 weeks Family Medicine 5 Obstetrics and Gynecology 5 Pediatrics 5 Psychiatry 5 Rural and Community Health 5 Surgery 5 Further Information The Class of 2016 will have 125 graduates. OHSU requires all students to complete two 4 th year Sub internships or ICU rotations in Internal Medicine, Family Medicine, Pediatrics, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Psychiatry or Surgery. OHSU has an active Alpha Omega Alpha Chapter. OHSU has an active Gold Humanism Honor Society. OHSU requires that students must pass USMLE Step 1 to enter the third year of medical school. All students must pass Step 2CS and Step 2CK in order to graduate. The narrative comments in the MSPE are reported exactly as written, with corrections made to reflect proper punctuation, grammar, spelling, etc. OHSU is completely in compliance with the AAMC Guidelines for Medical Schools Regarding

Academic Transcripts. Students are permitted to review the MSPE prior to its transmittal. Note: The grade of IP signifies that the Principles of Clinical Medicine is a full year course and the actual grade and credits are awarded spring term of the current academic year.