Since publication of the 2 Institute of Medicine reports, To Err is Human1 and Crossing the Quality Chasm,2 the public and government expect and demand higher quality and safer patient care. To accomplish its mission of improving health care by assessing and advancing the quality of resident physicians’ education,3 the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) encouraged competency-based education with the creation of 6 core competencies. Recently, the ACGME created the milestones, which emphasize competency-based developmental outcomes. The family medicine milestones, to become effective July 1, 2014, consist of 22 outcomes based on the 6 core competencies.
A mandate for family medicine residency programs is to ensure their graduates are able to provide safe health care to their patients. As programs begin to implement the milestones, an emerging complimentary theme is the entrustable professional activity (EPA), which is a way to translate competencies into clinical practice.4 Collectively, a set of EPAs for family medicine constitute the core clinical activities of a family physician,5 ie, what does a family physician do in practice and how do we know a graduate is competent to independently and safely practice those activities? Going beyond a checklist of behaviors, EPAs define the “knowledge, skills, and attitudes” integrated across the competency domains and the work that a family physician does.4
As family medicine is such a rigorous and diverse specialty, constructing a comprehensive list of EPAs is indeed a daunting task. One educator recommends a graduate medical education program have no more than 20 to 30 EPAs that are clear but not too detailed.6 An initial attempt at defining EPAs in family medicine included a list of 76 items that mostly focused on the ambulatory setting.6 Ideally, EPAs should be independently executable within a given time frame as well as observable and measurable.4 Ultimately, the EPAs should be a list of what the public can expect from their family physicians. Currently, a committee of family medicine leaders is drafting a list of EPAs for our specialty. They are expected to release the list this fall–intentionally coinciding with the anticipated Family Medicine for America’s Health report.
The emergence of EPAs in family medicine is intended to support the milestones, and it is important to note their differences. Milestones follow each competency along a developmental continuum. While milestones detail individual competencies, real care delivery requires integration of these abilities in a more complex manner.5 For example, an EPA on care for the underserved/vulnerable patient would require a resident (on multiple occasions) to demonstrate knowledge of population health, advocacy, and cost awareness, and to employ team-based care, utilize IT resources, etc. Proficiency in an EPA requires mastery of several competencies, and goes well beyond ACGME program requirements, time spent on rotations, or patient numbers. The EPA assessments are based on specific observable activities throughout residency and not just a general impression.
EPAs can also be used to drive curriculum development at the residency level. Program directors should use EPAs as they are intended to strengthen professional standards, improve patient safety, and enhance outcomes. The implementation of EPAs is not meant to be burdensome; rather, they should help programs bridge the gap between initial competency-based assessments and real-world practice. EPAs will be particularly helpful for family medicine faculty who struggle with Likert scale numerical ratings.
We are in an exciting time in family medicine education as we look to incorporating milestones and EPAs into our residency programs. Implementation should produce higher quality graduates who will provide safe, quality care to their patients and communities.
- © 2014 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.