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NewsDepartmentsF

Core Outcomes of Residency Training 2022 (Provisional)

Warren Newton, Colleen K. Cagno, Grant S. Hoekzema and Lou Edje
The Annals of Family Medicine March 2023, 21 (2) 191-194; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.2977
Warren Newton
American Board of Family Medicine and Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina
MD, MPH
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Colleen K. Cagno
ACGME Family Medicine Review Committee and Family and Community Medicine, University of Arizona Health Sciences, College of Medicine Tucson
MD
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Grant S. Hoekzema
ACGME Family Medicine Review Committee and Mercy Family Medicine Residency, Mercy Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri
MD, FAAFP
Roles: Chair
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Lou Edje
ACGME Family Medicine Review Committee and Medical Education and Family and Community Medicine, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio
MD, MHPE, FAAFP
Roles: Chair-Elect
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The 2023 ACGME family medicine residency program requirements1 call for the most significant change in family medicine residencies in the last 50 years. Major new features include an emphasis on the practice as the curriculum, outreach to communities to address health disparities, residency learning networks, independent learning plans for residents, flexibility for residencies and residents, a significant shift to competency-based education (CBME), and dedicated educational time for residency faculty to drive these changes.

All of these require significant change for residencies, faculty, and residents; most pressing now, however, is the transition to CBME because the new requirements go into effect July 1, 2023. These changes require the hard work of consensus building among the Family Medicine Review Committee (RCFM), the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM), residency program directors, faculty and the residents themselves, as well as changes in data systems the RCFM uses to accredit residencies and the ABFM uses to evaluate board eligibility, and modifications of the assessments that residents and faculty use on a daily and weekly basis. For many experienced program directors, the changes called for in the new standards are dramatic—the elimination of the 1,650 visits requirement as well as many fewer standards for specific numbers of months or hours of specific curricula. Instead, there are expectations that residents be competent on graduation in dozens of required essential skills in many curricular domains, and much more flexibility for residencies to create curricula that meet community needs and take advantage of the unique educational opportunities each community has to offer.

It is important to understand why CBME is so important—and why now. Despite ubiquitous rhetoric of “innovation and transformation,” the outcomes of health care in the United States are getting worse, with declining life expectancy,2 worse outcomes across all ages and most diseases,3 and COVID-19 teaching us all—again—about health disparities.4 We believe that well-trained personal physicians, embedded in communities and supported by a robust team, can address these problems. The new ACGME FM residency requirements double down on the Starfield 4 C’s—first contact care, comprehensiveness, continuity, and care coordination—and extend them to the community.5 We assert that exposure does not equate to competence: a family medicine resident is not competent in the care of children just because she has completed 5 months of rotations! We expect residents to co-create their education and believe that this will attract the best medical students. CBME will also force rethinking of faculty development and continuous quality improvement of residency programs. Finally, and most importantly, CBME done well can help drive the broader residency redesign effort the specialty has envisioned.

The key features of CBME are now well understood (Table 1).6 The first step is “to start with the end in mind”—to define the outcomes we expect from family medicine residencies. To that end, the ACGME RCFM, with input from ABFM, has begun to define the core outcomes of family medicine residency education. Beginning with the Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs) developed as a part of Family Medicine for Americas Health by the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), ABFM, American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians, the Association of Departments of Family Medicine, the Association of Family Medicine Residency Directors, NAPCRG, and the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM), along with concepts from the ACGME core competencies.7,8 A national summit of family medicine organizations January 19-20, 2023 provided broad input, and a revised document was reviewed again by the RCFM, the ABFM, the leadership of the AAFP, and the Family Medicine Leadership Council in February 2023.

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Table 1.

Van Melle Framework6 for Competency-Based Medical Education

Table 2 lists the proposed core outcomes of family medicine residency education. These outcomes represent a commitment to the public on behalf of the RCFM, the ABFM, and the specialty. There are a total of 12 outcomes, more practical than the roughly 67 curricular competencies detailed in the 2023 standards, and lower than 17 and 18 EPAs in pediatrics and surgery, respectively. The list includes specific competencies, such as communication skills, and also entrustable activities such as competence in continuity care and management of the acutely ill patient in the hospital. It takes advantage of strengths of the current family medicine curriculum, including teaching in behavioral health, quality improvement, and community health. These strengths will allow for the repurposing of many current assessments. Table 2 is also provisional: we commit to learning with the community and adjusting as necessary.

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Table 2.

Core Outcomes of Family Medicine Residency Training (Provisional)

What now? The RCFM is responsible for accrediting residencies. The RCFM and ABFM will now work with the ACGME data leadership to develop the data systems, including logs of clinical experiences and updating family medicine–specific resident survey questions, to allow the RCFM to monitor residencies. Importantly, family medicine is aligned with pediatrics, surgery, and other specialties, which are now moving from counts to competence: data systems will need to change. The RCFM understands that change will take time and will extend grace to programs. The ABFM will use the list of core outcomes to set standards for board eligibility. We are committed to high standards across a broad scope of practice. Priorities for 2023 include assurance that residencies can assess competencies effectively and emphasis on the most important competencies for individual residents. For example, program directors and the clinical competency committees (CCCs) will need to assure the ABFM that individual residents provide excellent continuity care, can assess and treat a sick child appropriately, and be able to diagnose and manage an acutely ill hospital patient with multiple comorbidities. We also expect that graduating residents will be able to lead or participate in the hard work of interprofessional teams necessary for improving quality and addressing health disparities.

Neither the RCFM nor the ABFM, however, has the capacity to develop, test, and spread assessments or lead the new faculty development programs necessary across the country. We have learned from the experience of the College of Family Physicians of Canada9 that it is vital that family medicine develop an explicit assessment strategy for what will be assessed and how assessment will take place, and a complementary educational strategy that underscores how residents will learn in the new system, including digital tools that allow real-time formative feedback to help faculty, CCCs, and program directors to guide residents’ development. We are grateful to the STFM for leading this effort and engaging other organizations and specialties in the dialogue. All of the organizations of family medicine have a critical role to play: it takes a village to redesign residency education!

Several other specialty-wide interventions will support these efforts. As of this writing, the ACGME Board of Directors has reconsidered the specialty’s request for more faculty time devoted to education; substantial work and advocacy remain, but we are cautiously optimistic. Dedicated faculty time for education is critical to CBME and to residency redesign. In addition, in early April, STFM will convene a national summit on residency learning networks. The examples of I3, P4, Length of Training, Clinic First, and WWAMI have demonstrated huge benefits from residency collaboratives. We hope that all US residencies will participate in a learning collaborative addressing practice transformation and CBME, with departments, AAFP state chapters and other organizations serving as sponsors.10 Soon, the ABFM Foundation will announce a $2,500,000 request for proposals for planning and seed funding for residency learning networks. In May, the ACGME will conduct a special workshop to “train the trainers”—the residency faculty who will help teach us all about the implementation of CBME. We are grateful to Dr Eric Holmboe and the ACGME for this tangible support for our specialty.

Family medicine starts with a considerable challenge. As a specialty, our residencies have suffered more than most specialties from COVID-19, and healing at the clinic, community, and personal levels will take years. We currently have 745 residencies, over 15,000 residents and are growing faster than any other specialty. And, of course, the changes called for by the new ACGME FM requirements are very ambitious. Despite all the challenges, almost 4,000 people participated in planning over the last 3 years. Our tribe is passionate about clinical care and education—and convinced our graduates can help heal our patients, communities, and the health care system. The RCFM and the ABFM are proud to have all of you as partners.

  • © 2023 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.

References

  1. 1.↵
    1. Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education
    . ACGME Common Program Requirements (Residency). Published 2023. Accessed Feb 18, 2023. https://www.acgme.org/globalassets/pfassets/programrequirements/cprresidency_2023v2.pdf
  2. 2.↵
    1. Woolf SH,
    2. Schoomaker H.
    Life expectancy and mortality rates in the United States, 1959-2017. JAMA. 2019; 322(20): 1996-2016. doi:10.1001/jama.2019.16932
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  3. 3.↵
    1. Woolf SH,
    2. Aron L
    1. National Research Council, Institute of Medicine
    . The National Academies Collection: Reports funded by National Institutes of Health. In: Woolf SH, Aron L, eds. US Health in International Perspective: Shorter Lives, Poorer Health. National Academies Press; 2013.
  4. 4.↵
    1. Institute of Medicine
    . Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. National Academies Press; 2003.
  5. 5.↵
    1. Bazemore A,
    2. Grunert T.
    Sailing the 7C’s: Starfield revisited as a foundation of family medicine residency redesign. Fam Med. 2021; 53(7): 506-515. doi:10.22454/FamMed.2021.383659
    OpenUrlCrossRef
  6. 6.↵
    1. Van Melle E,
    2. Frank JR,
    3. Holmboe ES,
    4. Dagnone D,
    5. Stockley D,
    6. Sherbino J; International Competency-Based Medical Education Collaborators
    . A core components framework for evaluating implementation of competency-based medical eduation programs. Acad Med. 2019; 94(7): 1002-1009. doi:10.1097/ACM.0000000000002743
    OpenUrlCrossRef
  7. 7.↵
    1. Association of Family Medicine Residency Directors
    . Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs). Accessed Feb 18, 2023. https://www.afmrd.org/page/epa
  8. 8.↵
    1. Society of Teachers of Family Medicine
    . EPAs competencies, subcompetencies, and milestones. Accessed Feb 18, 2023. https://www.stfm.org/teachingresources/resources/epascompetenciesmilestones/overview/
  9. 9.↵
    1. Oandasan I,
    2. Saucier D
    , eds. Triple C Competency-based curriculum report - part 2: advancing implementation. Published 2013. Accessed Jul 29, 2013. https://www.cfpc.ca/uploadedFiles/Education/_PDFs/TripleC_Report_pt2.pdf
  10. 10.↵
    1. Newton W,
    2. Fetter G,
    3. Hoekzema GS,
    4. Hughes L,
    5. Magill M.
    Residency learning networks: why and how. Ann Fam Med. 2022; 20(5): 492-494. doi:10.1370/afm.2885
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
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The Annals of Family Medicine: 21 (2)
The Annals of Family Medicine: 21 (2)
Vol. 21, Issue 2
March/April 2023
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Core Outcomes of Residency Training 2022 (Provisional)
Warren Newton, Colleen K. Cagno, Grant S. Hoekzema, Lou Edje
The Annals of Family Medicine Mar 2023, 21 (2) 191-194; DOI: 10.1370/afm.2977

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Core Outcomes of Residency Training 2022 (Provisional)
Warren Newton, Colleen K. Cagno, Grant S. Hoekzema, Lou Edje
The Annals of Family Medicine Mar 2023, 21 (2) 191-194; DOI: 10.1370/afm.2977
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  • Implementing Competency Based ABFM Board Eligibility
  • Implementing Competency Based ABFM Board Eligibility
  • Changing Gears: Family Medicine Residencies Transitioning to Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME) Framework With the New ACGME FM Program Requirements
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