"Nuts & Bolts 2" - A Guide to the Clinical Years
Section 1: General Information
Table of Contents
UCSF School of Medicine Education Program Mission
The educational mission of the School of Medicine is to prepare medical students
from diverse backgrounds for excellence and leadership in patient care, research,
education, and public service.
Competencies and Outcome Learning Objectives
Professionalism - UCSF graduates will have a capacity for self-evaluation and
moral reflection to sustain a lifetime of responsible, collegial, and compassionate practice
of medicine. Students will:
· Treat patients with compassion and respect, and with sensitivity to
their individuality;
· Apply the principles of honesty and integrity to clinical decision-making,
scientific pursuits, and interpersonal interactions;
· Understand the ethical dilemmas in medicine and develop a framework to
resolve those conflicts;
· Work collaboratively as a member of health care teams;
· Understand their personal strengths, limitations, and vulnerabilities;
· Use constructive feedback to improve their performance; and
· Demonstrate appropriate self-assessment and coping strategies, including
seeking assistance when needed.
Learning, Scholarship, and Leadership - UCSF graduates will be prepared to
continue their own education, teach others, provide leadership, and contribute to
scholarly activities. Students will:
· Acquire, manage, and use information for the care of individuals and
diverse populations;
· Reason deductively to solve clinical problems;
· Critically evaluate the medical literature;
· Use effective strategies for self-directed learning, including the use
of information technology;
· Demonstrate skills of self-reflection to enhance learning from experience;
· Expand their understanding and appreciation of the scientific foundation
of medicine as new discoveries are made;
· Demonstrate effective skills for teaching patients and colleagues;
· Understand methods of investigation and participate in scholarly and
creative activities; and
· Demonstrate leadership skills and abilities.
Scientific Foundations - UCSF graduates will recognize the central importance
of discovery, understand the scientific foundations of medicine, and apply that
understanding to the practice of evidence-based medicine. Students will:
· Understand normal development from the molecular to the socio-cultural
levels;
· Understand the pathophysiology of human disease at molecular, cellular,
systems, and whole organism levels;
· Understand how physical, psychological, sociological, cultural, and environmental
processes contribute to the etiology, pathogenesis, and manifestations of human
health and disease;
· Understand the natural history of illness and strategies for promoting
health and preventing illness; and
· Know how to critically appraise the scientific and clinical evidence
that underlies evidence-based approaches to the treatment and care of individuals
and populations.
Clinical Skills - UCSF graduates will master the core clinical skills needed to
evaluate and care for their patients. Students will:
· Obtain relevant medical histories from their patients;
· Perform appropriately focused physical examinations, including associated
technical procedures;
· Use laboratory and other diagnostic tests appropriately, taking into
account the utility, limitations, cost, and availability of these procedures;
· Synthesize information obtained from history, examination, and diagnostic
tests to formulate a differential diagnosis based on clinical and scientific
evidence;
· Use clinical judgment, scientific principles, and an evidence-based approach
to formulate an optimal plan of management, taking benefits, risks, and patient
preferences into consideration;
· Recognize and institute initial treatment for patients with life-threatening
emergencies;
· Listen to and communicate effectively with patients, patients' families,
colleagues, and others who contribute to health care delivery, in both written
records and in personal communication;
· Use their understanding of doctor/patient relationships in a therapeutic,
supportive, and culturally sensitive way for patients and their families;
· Advocate for high quality patient care for all;
· Consider population health perspectives and identify appropriate practice
innovations and improvements; and
· Understand and intervene in the health care system to improve patient
care outcomes.
This document was last updated on December 17, 2003.
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