Reflection
2 essays at 15 points each = 30%
Presentation
Team score assigned by team of raters = 30%
Peer Feedback
2 reviews at 10 points each = 20%
Independent Learning
2 Independent Learning Modules at 10 points each = 20%
Answer two of the following questions in writing and submit as specified by your team leaders.
1. In what ways is this PCHC experience challenging your stereotypes and assumptions?
2. How do social determinants of health impact the environment and experience of the community or population on which you are focused?
3. What lessons have you taken from this experience about the value of interprofessional care and best practices for improving care transitions ("hand-offs")?
Please respond to one of the following question sets in writing and submit as specified by your team leaders.
1. In what ways do you think you might advocate for (and with) the PCHC population? What have you learned about caring for a population through this PCHC that you think you'll be able to apply as a clinician?
OR
2. Please answer this reflective triad:
a. What? What is the most important thing you've learned?
b. So What? Why is it important that you learned it?
c. Now What? How will this experience shape your learning and action?
Optional:
The Gold Humanism Honor Society is collecting examples of humanism in medicine throughout the curriculum. If you would like to have the opportunity to share and publish your work on this reflection through social media, our blogs, or other forums. This is optional in addition to the submission for credit for the clerkship:
Reflection Scoring Rubric
Please work as a team to develop a powerpoint presentation for the PCHC peer and community learning session on the last day of the clerkship. The audience includes peers, team leaders, and community partners from several clerkships. Note that each team must be prepared to share screens during presentation via Zoom, and to upload their presentation as a pdf or ppt file to the team shared google folder following Presentation Day. Presentations will be recorded.
Present as a team, identifying who will present which segments and in what order. Allow for 20 minutes total, followed by 5 minutes of questions. Teams can use their discretion in allotment of time among segments to allow emphasis on key components of the experience. It is not necessary for every student to speak during the presentation; if not all are vocal, please explain how the team's work was divided in a way that recognizes the unique contributions of each team member.
Presentation Segments
Part 1 : Definition and characterization of the population of focus
Part 2 : Interprofessional teams
Part 3 : Population health advocacy: strategies and opportunities
Part 4 : Service/ experiential learning
Part 5 : Acknowledgements
Part 1: Definition of the population of focus
1. Identify and define the population of focus. Answer the question: As a future provider, why is this a population that you should know more about? During your presentation, tell your peers what you have learned.
a. Summarize key demographics
i. Geographic distribution
ii. Age, race and class distribution
iii. Language, culture and citizenship
iv. Social and structural factors influencing the health of the population
b. Identify clinically relevant needs or trends
i. Common medical risk exposures and incidence rates
ii. Common social risk exposures and incidence rates
iii. Spotlight on disparities and areas of strength
Part 2: Exploring interprofessional teams of care
As a provider in tomorrow’s complex health systems, it will be essential that you understand the strengths brought by each care team member and the elements of effective interprofessional relationships among teams.
● Identify the professions that serve the population of focus
● What are their qualifications? What is the scope of practice for each?
● What is their relationship to each other? How much care is coordinated vs stand-alone? ● How/Where do they provide care for the population members?
● What are the strengths and limitations of the team?
● How would you interact with these other members of the team? What do you want your peers to know about these potential team members?
Part 3: Health advocacy
Advocacy specifically refers to promoting legislation, policies, systems, or specific budgetary appropriations that positively affect a health issue and or population. This may occur through decreasing barriers to accessing health services, providing an infrastructure conducive to effective health promotion programs, or directly increasing the resources and infrastructure of the public health system.
● What are some of the local, state, national or international organizations that do advocacy work related to the population of focus?
● Identify 2-3 key local, state, national, and when relevant international organizations that do advocacy on behalf of your population on focus.
● What are the major areas of advocacy? Why?
● To whom do they advocate? What has been their track record (successes and challenges)? ● What are the consequences of success or failure?
● How can providers (you and your peers—nurses, physicians, others?) be involved in advocacy for this population?
Part 4: Service/ experiential learning
Please describe the ways in which you were actively engaged with the population of focus, providing service, giving back to community partners, and/or learning by doing.
● What activities did your group perform? Were there measurable outcomes or products that could be shared? ● What needs in the community were being addressed? How were these needs identified and how do they build on the community’s assets? Are there power issues that result in needs being perpetuated? ● What did you learn from the experience? How might the time you spent in the community shape your approach to clinical practice?
Part 5: Acknowledgements
Please acknowledge the UMMS and community faculty and staff involved in your clerkship, the agencies with whom you worked, and the people you met. Include the UMMS and agencies’ logos. Often PCHC presentations become a foundation for future presentations, Capstones, scholarly projects and/or publications. If you have used photos or images with recognizable faces, please include consent forms (available in the shared file folder) when you submit your final presentation. If you think your clerkship group’s work may merit presentation at a professional conference, we encourage you to get in touch with one of the members of the PCHC Planning and Oversight Group to discuss.
Final presentation slides must be submitted by Monday, November 7 at 8AM EST.
The presentation is rated on the following:
How well did this team: (5 point scale: 5=Very well – 1= Not well at all)
1. Use data to define a population OR discuss how data is used in the community?
2. Identify a range of professionals working with the population of interest/ discuss interprofessional care
3. Discuss advocacy issues of importance to the population
4. Describe service or experiential learning
5. Work together/explain team roles during the presentation
6. Answer questions and lead discussion
Groups are invited to list any community-engaged activities in Collaboratory, (https://he.cecollaboratory.com/umms), which is the new software for tracking the impact of community-engaged activities at UMass Chan Medical School.
To learn how to use this software and find a step-by-step document for listing an activity: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1--dvFfTqRuJOP_21C7_VXpyhA4neZcgbeXJTNARsmYE/edit?usp=sharing
For a general overview and steps on using Collaboratory: https://rise.articulate.com/share/7MpCMmQyxeC4cz2chZr8kT7RBV3BTkjV
Students are expected to attend and provide feedback to at least two other teams’ presentations. A student can earn up to 10 points toward their final grade for each of two complete reviews (20 points total) submitted through this survey by Monday, November 7 at 8am. For each presentation reviewed, we will ask that you identify the team being reviewed and then briefly:
1. Share three insights you gained
2. Comment on presentation strengths
3. Note areas for improvement or further exploration
We will compile all the responses, remove your names and then share the feedback with the faculty and learners on each team.
https://umassmed.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_eOHYwx1X2FBMW2i
This year, we've added two independent learning modules to ensure that everyone has access to foundational concepts of population and community health. Each ILM takes between 45-60 minutes to complete. Each student will be expected to complete both ILMs by November 4 at 5pm. Be sure to submit your name using the survey mechanism embedded at the end of each ILM to document completion for the assignment of points.
Module 1:
https://rise.articulate.com/share/6dd9GHyEHE4a_GmG821ujhG6gSHE5PCO
Module 2:
https://rise.articulate.com/share/x66LSnHVi7j0vdCA3chZt9OhMk2e80ZX