Strategies to improve teaching in the ambulatory medicine setting
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
11-12-1990
Journal
Archives of Internal Medicine
Volume
150
Issue
10
DOI
10.1001/archinte.150.10.2133
Abstract
Expansion of resident training in ambulatory medicine has created new challenges for faculty preceptors. Outpatient teaching is hampered by inadequate time and a reliance on methods of instruction that are more useful for the inpatient setting. Effective outpatient teaching requires an understanding of the objectives of ambulatory medical training and improved facility with teaching methods that accommodate the brief, impromptu nature of ambulatory teaching. In a hypothetical outpatient teaching encounter, the interactions between the patient, resident, and attending physician are dissected to reveal missed opportunities to teach and to explore alternative approaches to the educational process. These approaches include promoting the resident's role as the primary provider, developing a limited teaching agenda for each teaching encounter, focusing on the learner rather than on the diagnostic dilemma posed by the patient, and using questions, role modeling and observation with feedback to promote learning.
APA Citation
Lesky, L., & Borkan, S. (1990). Strategies to improve teaching in the ambulatory medicine setting. Archives of Internal Medicine, 150 (10). http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archinte.150.10.2133