Cargando…

The Brandenburg reformed medical curriculum: study locally, work locally

The Brandenburg Medical School “Theodor Fontane” (MHB) was founded in 2014 by municipal and non-profit institutions in Bernau, Brandenburg an der Havel and Neuruppin to train more physicians for the non-metropolitan region of Brandenburg. Since the 2015 summer term, 48 medical students have been enr...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Winkelmann, Andreas, Schendzielorz, Julia, Maske, Dagmar, Arends, Peter, Bohne, Christoph, Hölzer, Henrike, Harre, Karin, Nübel, Jonathan, Otto, Bertram, Oess, Stefanie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6883254/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31815159
http://dx.doi.org/10.3205/zma001257
_version_ 1783474327907205120
author Winkelmann, Andreas
Schendzielorz, Julia
Maske, Dagmar
Arends, Peter
Bohne, Christoph
Hölzer, Henrike
Harre, Karin
Nübel, Jonathan
Otto, Bertram
Oess, Stefanie
author_facet Winkelmann, Andreas
Schendzielorz, Julia
Maske, Dagmar
Arends, Peter
Bohne, Christoph
Hölzer, Henrike
Harre, Karin
Nübel, Jonathan
Otto, Bertram
Oess, Stefanie
author_sort Winkelmann, Andreas
collection PubMed
description The Brandenburg Medical School “Theodor Fontane” (MHB) was founded in 2014 by municipal and non-profit institutions in Bernau, Brandenburg an der Havel and Neuruppin to train more physicians for the non-metropolitan region of Brandenburg. Since the 2015 summer term, 48 medical students have been enrolled each year, accepted through the university’s own selection process in which the score on the German school-leaving exam (Abitur) and time spent on the waiting list play subordinate roles. Tuition fees can be partially financed through scholarship agreements with regional hospitals if the applicants commit themselves to medical specialist training (Facharztweiterbildung) at a particular hospital. The main places of study are Neuruppin and Brandenburg an der Havel; there is a decentralized study phase from the eighth to tenth semester of study. The Brandenburg Reformed Medical Curriculum (BMM) complies with the model clause contained in the German regulations governing the licensing of medical doctors (ÄAppO). The curriculum is based on problem-based learning (PBL) and focused on competencies and consists of integrated interdisciplinary modules that combine, from the very beginning, basic sciences with clinical and theoretical medical subjects. The focus on general practice is visible in the regularly held “Practical Days” (Praxistag) during which second-year students and above have the opportunity to observe at participating medical practices and familiarize themselves with primary care in Brandenburg. A special focus of BMM is on the acquisition and development of communication and interpersonal skills. These are imparted through a longitudinal curriculum referred to as “Teamwork, Reflection, Interaction, Communication” (TRIK). High value is placed on critical thinking and scientific scholarship and this is reflected in an eight-week academic placement in which the students independently write a research paper. Several different teaching formats ensure that, along with learning specific subjects, sustained personal development can also take place. BMM’s decentralized study phase starting in the eighth semester represents a special part of the curriculum in which students complete their clinical training in small groups at selected cooperating hospitals in Brandenburg. This phase encompasses not only hospital placements and other local patient-centered courses, but also centralized instruction via video conferencing to assure that basic sciences and clinical theory continue to be covered. Knowledge- and performance-based semester assessments, in particular OSCEs, reinforce the practical aspects of the training. These replace the M1 state medical examination in the first study phase. The first medical students are now in their ninth semester as of April 2019, making it still too early for final evaluations. The curriculum, successfully implemented to date, already satisfies core requirements of the Master Plan 2020 for undergraduate medical education (Masterplan Medizinstudium 2020) with the curriculum's organization and structure, curricular content, assessment formats and student admission process. With its decentralized structure, BMM specifically addresses the social and health policy challenges facing rural regions of Brandenburg. This is the first curriculum that has taken on the improvement of healthcare in rural regions as its central aim.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6883254
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher German Medical Science GMS Publishing House
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68832542019-12-06 The Brandenburg reformed medical curriculum: study locally, work locally Winkelmann, Andreas Schendzielorz, Julia Maske, Dagmar Arends, Peter Bohne, Christoph Hölzer, Henrike Harre, Karin Nübel, Jonathan Otto, Bertram Oess, Stefanie GMS J Med Educ Article The Brandenburg Medical School “Theodor Fontane” (MHB) was founded in 2014 by municipal and non-profit institutions in Bernau, Brandenburg an der Havel and Neuruppin to train more physicians for the non-metropolitan region of Brandenburg. Since the 2015 summer term, 48 medical students have been enrolled each year, accepted through the university’s own selection process in which the score on the German school-leaving exam (Abitur) and time spent on the waiting list play subordinate roles. Tuition fees can be partially financed through scholarship agreements with regional hospitals if the applicants commit themselves to medical specialist training (Facharztweiterbildung) at a particular hospital. The main places of study are Neuruppin and Brandenburg an der Havel; there is a decentralized study phase from the eighth to tenth semester of study. The Brandenburg Reformed Medical Curriculum (BMM) complies with the model clause contained in the German regulations governing the licensing of medical doctors (ÄAppO). The curriculum is based on problem-based learning (PBL) and focused on competencies and consists of integrated interdisciplinary modules that combine, from the very beginning, basic sciences with clinical and theoretical medical subjects. The focus on general practice is visible in the regularly held “Practical Days” (Praxistag) during which second-year students and above have the opportunity to observe at participating medical practices and familiarize themselves with primary care in Brandenburg. A special focus of BMM is on the acquisition and development of communication and interpersonal skills. These are imparted through a longitudinal curriculum referred to as “Teamwork, Reflection, Interaction, Communication” (TRIK). High value is placed on critical thinking and scientific scholarship and this is reflected in an eight-week academic placement in which the students independently write a research paper. Several different teaching formats ensure that, along with learning specific subjects, sustained personal development can also take place. BMM’s decentralized study phase starting in the eighth semester represents a special part of the curriculum in which students complete their clinical training in small groups at selected cooperating hospitals in Brandenburg. This phase encompasses not only hospital placements and other local patient-centered courses, but also centralized instruction via video conferencing to assure that basic sciences and clinical theory continue to be covered. Knowledge- and performance-based semester assessments, in particular OSCEs, reinforce the practical aspects of the training. These replace the M1 state medical examination in the first study phase. The first medical students are now in their ninth semester as of April 2019, making it still too early for final evaluations. The curriculum, successfully implemented to date, already satisfies core requirements of the Master Plan 2020 for undergraduate medical education (Masterplan Medizinstudium 2020) with the curriculum's organization and structure, curricular content, assessment formats and student admission process. With its decentralized structure, BMM specifically addresses the social and health policy challenges facing rural regions of Brandenburg. This is the first curriculum that has taken on the improvement of healthcare in rural regions as its central aim. German Medical Science GMS Publishing House 2019-10-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6883254/ /pubmed/31815159 http://dx.doi.org/10.3205/zma001257 Text en Copyright © 2019 Winkelmann et al. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. See license information at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Article
Winkelmann, Andreas
Schendzielorz, Julia
Maske, Dagmar
Arends, Peter
Bohne, Christoph
Hölzer, Henrike
Harre, Karin
Nübel, Jonathan
Otto, Bertram
Oess, Stefanie
The Brandenburg reformed medical curriculum: study locally, work locally
title The Brandenburg reformed medical curriculum: study locally, work locally
title_full The Brandenburg reformed medical curriculum: study locally, work locally
title_fullStr The Brandenburg reformed medical curriculum: study locally, work locally
title_full_unstemmed The Brandenburg reformed medical curriculum: study locally, work locally
title_short The Brandenburg reformed medical curriculum: study locally, work locally
title_sort brandenburg reformed medical curriculum: study locally, work locally
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6883254/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31815159
http://dx.doi.org/10.3205/zma001257
work_keys_str_mv AT winkelmannandreas thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT schendzielorzjulia thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT maskedagmar thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT arendspeter thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT bohnechristoph thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT holzerhenrike thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT harrekarin thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT nubeljonathan thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT ottobertram thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT oessstefanie thebrandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT winkelmannandreas brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT schendzielorzjulia brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT maskedagmar brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT arendspeter brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT bohnechristoph brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT holzerhenrike brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT harrekarin brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT nubeljonathan brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT ottobertram brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally
AT oessstefanie brandenburgreformedmedicalcurriculumstudylocallyworklocally