Issue: October 2014
February 19, 2015
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Societies Provide Tools to Meet New Competency Requirements

Issue: October 2014
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The Oversight Working Network, which represents five gastroenterology and hepatology societies, has developed a series of “toolboxes” to help program directors and fellows enhance assessment of trainees and comply with new accreditation requirements, according to a press release.

The new Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Internal Medicine Subspecialty Reporting Milestones requirements are a key part of the Next Accreditation System, an outcomes-based system for graduate medical education programs that took effect on July 1 for gastroenterologists.

To help facilitate adherence to and completion of this semiannual reporting milestones requirement, toolboxes for 13 core tasks referred to in the project’s white paper as entrustable professional activities have been created by the five societies participating in the Oversight Working Network (OWN). These include the American Gastroenterological Association Institute, the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the American College of Gastroenterology, the American Neurogastroenterology and Motility Society, and the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy. Additional support came from the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition and the GI Program Directors Caucus.

Societies OWN 

The entrustable professional activities define the core tasks of the GI/hepatology profession and are designed to help trainees identify goals and expectations from their programs and from the specialty and society as a whole. They are not intended as pedagogical mandates, but as a means to identify a core set of achievements for all GI fellows, according to the white paper.

“The GI societies must ensure that the needs of our trainees, program directors and educators are being met in ways that best help them prepare for the practice of gastroenterology and hepatology,” Suzanne Rose, MD, MSEd, professor of medicine and senior associate dean for education at University of Connecticut School of Medicine, stated in the release.

Each EPA toolbox has been made available on the OWN website, as well as in the journals of the participating societies.

Source: Oversight Working Network,
www.ownyourfellowship.org.