This message contains graphics. If you do not see the graphics,
click here to view.
How are your programs accommodating residents who must adhere to new physical distancing requirements? What challenges are you running into with providing residents adequate workspaces? I’m sure your colleagues who are struggling with these problems would like practical solutions to provide more space for their residents to work safely. Email me with how your program has overcome these challenges and your responses could end up in an upcoming article. |
| Editor's Picks Now that your residents have arrived and are settled in, it’s the perfect time to take the 2020 Residency Coordinator Salary Survey. Without your responses we can’t continue to provide you with the most accurate information about coordinators’ working conditions. If you have already taken it, please pass the survey link along to your colleagues. In return for completing the survey, respondents will be eligible for a drawing to win a free copy of The Residency Coordinator's Handbook, Fourth Edition. Click here or enter this URL into the address bar of your browser to take the survey: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/ResSalary2020 To teach quality improvement (QI) and value-based medicine (VBM), New York University School of Medicine's internal medicine residency program introduced a project-based curriculum in which residents would pitch improvement ideas to the hospital leadership. We live in a generation of advanced technology and sometimes it is tempting to use that technology in a way that is not in conformance with Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act (HIPAA) standards. Don’t be the resident who gets their car broken into and computer stolen, compromising all the protected health information of the patient records stored there. Residents’ desire to function professionally and act in the best interest of patients and their families influences and even determines every action they take. However, this dedication sometimes leads to psychosocial issues that can jeopardize their health and job performance. Marketing Spotlight The Guide for Graduate Medical Education Offices and Program Coordinators provides the office of graduate medical education (GME) and program coordinators the guidance they need to successfully run a GME program together. Author Vicki Hamm, C-TAGME, provides how-to guidance and tools for implementing ACGME Institutional Requirements, institutional policies, crafting resident/fellow contracts, managing evaluations, maintaining program accreditation, and other daily duties. This book contains sample policies and forms to customize for your institution. This book will guide your GME operations so that you can achieve compliance with ACGME requirements; support your program directors, and faculty; and most importantly, produce trainees who become skilled physicians as they move from the educational continuum to the independent practice of medicine.
Order your copy today! Is All of Your Team In The Know? Our weekly e-newsletters can keep your team abreast of up-to-date industry information; including expert analysis where you need it most. Subscribe to any -- or all -- of our e-newsletters. |
|
Sponsor this Newsletter | For advertising opportunities in this or other HCPro email newsletters, please contact [email protected] or call 207-747-4812. |
| DISCLAIMER Advice given is general, and readers should consult professional counsel for specific legal, ethical, or clinical questions. Users of this service should consult attorneys who are familiar with federal and state health laws. HCPro is not affiliated in any way with The Joint Commission, which owns the JCAHO and Joint Commission trademarks, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, which owns the ACGME trademark, or the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care (AAAHC). If you prefer not to receive this email newsletter, you can unsubscribe here Copyright 2020 HCPro |
|
| |
|