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Training our Future Country Doctors Interprofessional community-based public health education: An Introduction to the Community Partnership model as a best practice. Presented by Joe Florence, MD, RPCT Director At China-ETSU Health Education Institute November 16, 2011. Objectives.
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Training our Future Country DoctorsInterprofessional community-based public health education: An Introduction to the Community Partnership model as a best practice Presented by Joe Florence, MD, RPCT Director At China-ETSU Health Education Institute November 16, 2011
Objectives At the end of this presentation, participants will have knowledge of “best practices” for preparing health care professionals for future rural practice: • the Rural Primary Care Track of the Quillen College of Medicine. • the Community Partnership • Interprofessional community-based public health education
Rural Experience • Rural community based origin • James H. Quillen’s Legacy • Rural mission and Institutional Purpose: • with emphasis on community based and inter-professional education • special emphasis on addressing the needs of Southern Appalachia in the area of rural health care
US News and World Report Rural Medicine Best Medical Schools • ETSU Quillen College of Medicine • Ranked #3 in the US in 2011 • There is a growing need in the U.S. for rural medicine doctors. Through these programs, students train to be physicians in rural and underserved communities.
ETSU Approach to Rural Curriculum Teaching-Learning Teaching-Learning Adding to the knowledge of regional community health issues Student reflection on future professional value and sense of civic responsibility Community-based Scholarship Community Services Interdisciplinary Leaders Partnerships Service Research Service Research Using the principles of community based participatory research to address community identified issues and opportunities
ETSU Rural Programs – Community PartnershipsContinuum of Educational Experiences
Rural Primary Care Track (RPCT)Goals • Increase Rural Primary Care Physicians • Train Physicians to Function in Health Care Teams • Equip Physicians To Become Effective Agents (Leaders) of Community Change
Key Concepts of the RPCT Emphasis on: • Clinical experience in context of the community • Health Promotion, Disease Prevention • Community Based Participatory Research • Community Assessment and Projects • Inter-professional Training (Medicine, Nursing, Public Health, Pharmacy, Social Work, Clinical Psychology, Respiratory Therapy, Chaplains)
Rural Primary Care Track (RPCT) Medical Students • Elect to participate. • Formal application process which includes – online application, essays and interview. • Limited to 25% of the COM Class. • Partner with • Rogersville, • Mountain City and • Another rural community
Rural Primary Care TrackAs of March 2011 Total practicing in primary care - 64% Total in rural practice location - 57% Total in Tri Cities TN practice (non-rural) - 8% Total in Tennessee practice - 56% Tennessee natives - 77% Select Tennessee residencies - 50% Tennessee natives, TN residency and TN practice - 30% Tennessee natives in Tennessee practice - 57% Tennessee natives in out of state practice - 43% Out-of-state native in Tennessee practice - 26% Out-of-state natives in out-of-state practice - 74%
Role of the Rural Community-based Faculty Mentor and Coach Crucial to success Establishes the learning environment
The Interdisciplinary Rural Primary Care Community Partnerships • Since 1992 enrolled 700 students from Medicine, Nursing, Public Health, Environmental Health, Social Work and Psychology. • Received the National Rural Health Association “Outstanding Rural Health Program” in 2007.
Interprofessional ObjectivesAccreditation Competencies Shared by Health Professions • Knowledge • Health Promotion and Disease Prevention • Determinants of Health • IRB and HIPAA training • Theories and conceptual models for promoting change • Roles of various health professions • Health status indicators from primary and secondary data sources • Cultural Competency • Health Disparities • Skills • Research – Community Based Participatory Research and Translational Research • Quality Improvement • Community Assessment of health and health assets • Project planning, implementation, evaluation • Communication • Behaviors • Interdisciplinary team collaboration • Collaborative community partnerships • Serving the Underserved • Caring
Rural Health Training – best practices • Mentoring • campus based faculty who promote rural • especially family medicine center faculty • specialists who promote rural • rural physicians • Instill confidence to work in rural communities - demystify rural medicine
Rural Health Training – best practices • Immersion • Involvement • civic activities • nurture leadership • “Longitudinal” rural experiences provide more accurate “feel” for what practices in rural communities compared with “Block”
Rural Health Training – best practices • Knowledge unique to or more common in rural • Occupational • Environmental • Recreational • Socio-economic • Cultural • Spiritual – issues of trust and safety for self, others, nature and God • Barriers to health (access)
Rural Curriculum - best practices • Skills unique to or more common in rural patients’ life in rural • Office procedures • Management practices, billing, budgeting, QI • Stabilization and triage • Experiences which promote understanding rural patients in their context • Home visits • Work place – occupational health evaluations; service delivery – E&M; risk assessment
Rural Curriculum - best practices Community projects • Service Learning • Community Based Participatory Research • Inter-professional, Interdisciplinary • Health Careers Education • Population Based - School aged, Senior Citizens • Occupationally based - Farming, logging, mining, etc. • Recreationally based- Hunting, fishing, hiking, camping, etc.
Immersion in Rural life and practice • Typical life outside of practice • recreational things to do • good/desirable lifestyle • raising a family in rural community • Support – • Professional • Personal and family • Practice options in a rural community • Financial perspectives – incomes, expenses • Exposure to various practice styles – CHC, RHC, Private, etc.
Develop community sites and foster Partnership • Partner with • Rural physicians individually and their organizations • Rural clinical service facilities: family practice centers, CHC’s, RHC’s, Health Departments, long term care, rural hospitals • Specialists serving the rural communities
Develop community sites and foster Partnership • Exemplary clinical practice • Private practice – solo and group • CHC • RHC • Health Department • Hospital • Extended, long term care • Hospice
Technology: optimize Tele-health experiences • Patient care - team care • Electronic Medical Records – Regional Health Information sharing (RHIOs) • Tele-medicine clinics • Information Access – evidenced based care • WEB based data bases, libraries • Continuing education • Promote students/residents as teachers to “give back” to rural health care providers
RURAL PROGRAM DEVELOPMENTA Quality Improvement Process Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Developing Rural Competence • Competence is a habit • Health care is a cooperative art; performance occurs in relationships; competence in relationships • Competence is developed along a continuum • Knowing the rules is not enough; values are important Adapted from “Residency Training and Systems Based Practice” (2004) David C. Leach, MD, Exec Director ACGME
Principles for Rural Success • recruiting rural students into the health professions • giving admissions preferences for rural students • implementing rural training tracks • training in rural communities • preferences for rural primary care
Rural training best practices • In Rural • By Rural • About Rural • For Rural • With Partnership
If you want a Rural Health Workforce, you need to provide Medical Students and other Health Professional Students with Rural Experiences……. You Can’t Fall in Love with Something You Never Experience!