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Hospital Medicine

Introduction

Most Canadian hospitalists are family physicians who have developed the necessary set of skills required to care for their complicated hospitalized patients through years of experience. In our ever-۲ݮƵ health care climate, with the complexity of patient care, the development of quality metrics and resource efficiencies as part of the everyday life of a hospitalist, there is a need for extra training opportunities. The development of key clinical abilities are needed for this role and often times there is insufficient time in our two year family practice residency to focus on the inpatient. The future viability of community hospitals is at stake, as fewer family medicine graduates complete their training and take up inpatient work with our community hospitals.

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Specific Objectives

The goal is to develop enthusiastic family physicians that choose to work primarily in hospitals, while still adhering to the founding principles of Family Medicine while providing a multidisciplinary approach to patient care and having a vested interest in making hospitals run better. Future graduates will take leadership roles in addressing quality, efficiency, and cost effectiveness, by improving care processes from admission to discharge. The Society of Hospital Medicine in the United States developed a 51-chapter document in 2002 outlining the core competencies that were felt to be the necessary skills that all hospitalists should have. They used their core competencies to set expectations regarding the role of hospitalists, developing knowledge, skills and attitudes to have a successful and pivotal role in hospital culture. These documents have been reviewed and have assisted in planning a solid foundation for this program while helping to guide its future development.

Program Description

Duration

The ۲ݮƵ Hospital Medicine Training Program is of a twelve month duration.

Rotations / Learning Sites

The training program will consist of 13 blocks of 4 weeks each, with the allotted vacation time as any PGY-3 year is required to provide. The training would take place at St Mary’s Hospital, the Jewish General Hospital and the MUHC, including Lachine General Hospital site, and possibly some ۲ݮƵ rural sites and is proposed as follows:

•3 blocks ward medicine, including 1 block Short Stay Unit (SSU)
• 1 block CCU
• 1block ICU
• 2 blocks elective (outside the core hospital). Can be divided into 4 blocks of 2 weeks each
• 2 blocks consult service Internal medicine
• 1 block Scholarly Project
• 2 blocks shared care experience (Oncology, Neurology, Orthopedics and Pulmonary )
• 1 block selective which can be either Ward medicine, ICU or CCU
• Electives can be chosen from the following areas: cardiology, nephrology, neurology, endocrinology, GI, Oncology, palliative-inpatient care, radiology, ID, chronic care, ER,ICU, and rural hospitalization

Fellow Duties and Responsibilities

1) Patient care on whichever service they are scheduled, including admissions, discharges and daily rounds; To be supervised by the attending physician.


2) Whenever possible the R3 will take on the clinical and teaching responsibilities of a “junior staff” physician.


3) Attendance at departmental meetings when appropriate.


4)Attendance at Medical Grand Rounds


5) Prepare a talk to be given at Medical Grand Rounds


6) The R3s will be involved in supervising residents and students during the various rotations. Their involvement in direct patient care will vary from one rotation to another and will be commensurate with their level of training and experience.


7) During the last 2 rotations, the Resident will be expected to perform as a co-attending, with the same call (usually from home) and coverage (including weekends and holidays) as their staff, under the supervision of that staff.

Scholarly Activity

Each resident will be required to complete a Scholarly Project (this could be a research project, a literature search and review presentation, a quality assurance review, development of a clinical tool etc.) under the supervision of a mentor. Also ۲ݮƵ Family Medicine has developed a series of webinars to teach research methodology to trainees

Evaluation Process

The site directors will serve as the One45 supervisors for the residents at their site. They will collate feedback from field-notes and rotation evaluations


R3s will be assessed with respect to their achievement of mastery of the core competencies outlined in Appendix I. Daily evaluations (field notes) along with summary assessments will be collated to complete the one45 rotation evaluations. These evaluations will assist the resident and the academic advisor in identifying strengths and areas to focus on throughout the training period

Apply/Contact Us

For information regarding the program
benjamin.schiff [at] mcgill.ca (Dr.Benjamin Schiff)
DirectorHospital Medicine Program

For information regarding the application process
postgrad.fammed [at] mcgill.ca (Alana Walsh-Ferland)
Postgraduate and Enhanced Skills Coordinator
514-399-9126

Please refer to the following URL for details on how to apply to the Hospitalist Medicine Enhanced Skills program.

Inquiries regarding the application process should be directed to admissionspg.med [at] mcgill.ca.

Application deadline for the next academic year is December 15th, 2023.

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