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Residency Timeline

PGY1:
  • End of intern year, beginning of PGY2 take Step 3.
 
PGY2:
  • Take Step 3 if not yet complete.
  • Mid-winter apply for Chief resident positions
  • Spring start planning fellowship applications.
 
PGY3:
  • Summer complete fellowship applications
  • Fall search for hospitalist and/or primary care jobs
    • Apply for medical license and DEA​
  • December register for ABIM. Late fee starting mid-April
  • December apply for AZ license, DEA certificate. 
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All years: 
  • Conferences, scholarly activity
  • Meet with advisor Q6 mo to stay on track for graduation.
  • Study for ABIM with MKSAP and Step 3 prep.

Evaluation and Progression

Clinical Competency Committee
Mentorship
Milestone Report
Entrustment Scale
Assessments
Your role
Curriculum
ACGME Clinical Competencies
ACGME Educational Competencies
Residents are evaluated on multiple milestones in six different categories, as defined by the ACGME. 

Click here to read the full ACGME Program Requirements for Graduate Medical Education in Internal Medicine 

Professionalism 
Residents must demonstrate a commitment to professionalism and an adherence to ethical principles

Patient Care and Procedural Skills
Residents must be able to provide patient care that is patient- and family-centered, compassionate, equitable, appropriate, and effective for the treatment of health problems and the promotion of health. Residents must be able to perform all medical, diagnostic, and surgical procedures considered essential for the area of practice.

Medical Knowledge
Residents must demonstrate knowledge of established and evolving biomedical, clinical, epidemiological, and sociobehavioral sciences, including scientific inquiry, as well as the application of this knowledge to patient care.

Practice-based Learning and Improvement
Residents must demonstrate the ability to investigate and evaluate their care of patients, to appraise and assimilate scientific evidence, and to continuously improve patient care based on constant self-evaluation and lifelong learning.

Interpersonal and Communication
Skills Residents must demonstrate interpersonal and communication skills that result in the effective exchange of information and collaboration with patients, their families, and health professionals. Residents must learn to communicate with patients and patients’ families to partner with them to assess their care goals, including, when appropriate, end-oflife goals.

Systems-based Practice
Residents must demonstrate an awareness of and responsiveness to the larger context and system of health care, including the structural and social determinants of health, as well as the ability to call effectively on other resources to provide optimal health care. Residents must learn to advocate for patients within the health care system to achieve the patient's and patient’s family's care goals, including, when appropriate, end-of-life goals
Residents are scored on the individual milestones using a 5 point ENTRUSTMENT SCALE. Per the ACGME, residents must score a 3.5 or greater by the end of their residency in order to graduate.

Entrustment Scale Scoring
1 = Resident cannot consistently perform this skill, even with assistance.
2 = Resident can perform this skill but only under direct (i.e. physically present or immediately available) supervision by a more senior member of the team
3 = Resident can perform this skill with indirect supervision (i.e. immediately available by phone or senior member checking after completed).
4 = Can do this at the level of a general IM attending
5 = Expert, advanced skill beyond that of general IM attending.
Entrustment Scale
Curriculum
Curriculum consists of the structured learning tools (ambulatory modules, didactics, clinical teaching, etc.) and specific objectives set forth by each individual rotation. These are listed on New Innovations under Schedules >> Curriculum.

You may also reference the Curriculum Manual.
Assessments
Assessments are tools used by the program to evaluate a resident's progress toward each Milestone
  • Intraining Exam scores
  • Continuity clinic evals
  • MKSAP submissions
  • AHD participation
  • End-of-the-Month rotation evals
  • Targeted Direct Observation 
  • 360 evals
Clinical Competency Committee (CCC)
Assessments are used by the CCC to generate a semi-annual "Milestone Report" which is required by the ACGME. This report assigns a resident a numeric score in each of the Milestones, utilizing the entrustment scale. 

Who is the CCC composed of?
  • Program Director
  • Associate Program Directors
  • Faculty Member-at-large
The CCC Meets monthly​, reviews all resident tiles at least twice per year. All proceedings are confidential. 
Your Milestone Report
Is available for review at any time on New Innovations>>Portfolio>>My Reviews. 
Mentorship
Mentorship comes in many forms in our program. Mentorship opportunities include: â€‹
  • CCC APD Advisor
    • Every resident's progress is reviewed at least twice a year by the CCC. Each resident is assigned a CCC APD Advisor who will be the one reviewing them over time and meeting individually as needed to discuss specific feedback that has been evident from the CCC review. In addition, issues regarding individual residents may be referred through a variety of ways and include but are not limited to academic progress, professionalism issues, patient care concerns, or moral and ethical behavior. These concerns are discussed in a confidential manner and then discussed with the resident. In some instances it may be necessary to have the resident attend the meeting in person in order to set common coals and objects between the individual and the advisor.  
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  • Informal Mentors
    • A faculty mentor is any faculty member of your choice with whom you feel comfortable addressing your professional goals (e.g. cardiology faculty to help you with your goal of getting a position as a cardiology fellow) Your faculty mentor will help you develop your portfolio and other professional development. This may or may not be the same person as your coach
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Your Role
What you can do to influence your milestone report â€‹
  • Get the most out of the curriculum provided Set Goals! Get input from your evaluations, your observation of peers and role models, and your own personal aspirations. Be accountable to yourself regarding your progress toward these goals. Meet with your coach or informal mentors, and discuss the change you want to see.
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