Teaching health policy to residents-Three-Year experience with a multi-specialty curriculum

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Abstract

Introduction: Most residents have limited education or exposure to health policy during residency. AIMS: We developed a course to (1) educate residents on health policy topics applicable to daily physician practice; (2) expose residents to health policy careers through visits with policy makers and analysts; (3) promote personal engagement in health policy. Setting: Residents registered for a 3-week elective offered twice annually through the George Washington University Department of Health Policy. Program Description: The course format includes: daily required readings and small-group seminars with policy experts, interactive on-site visits with policy makers, and final team presentations to senior faculty on topical health policy issues. Program Evaluation: One hundred thirty residents from 14 specialties have completed the course to date. Seventy completed our post-course survey. Most participants [59 (84%)] felt the course was very or extremely helpful. Participant self-ratings increased from pre- to post-course in overall knowledge of health policy [2 (3%) good or excellent before, 58 (83%) after], likelihood of teaching policy concepts to peers [20 (25%) vs. 62 (86%)], and likelihood of pursuing further health policy training [28 (37%) vs. 56 (82%)]. Conclusions: This 3-week elective in health policy improves self-reported knowledge and interest in health policy research, advocacy, and teaching. © 2009 Society of General Internal Medicine.

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Greysen, S. R., Wassermann, T., Payne, P., & Mullan, F. (2009, December). Teaching health policy to residents-Three-Year experience with a multi-specialty curriculum. Journal of General Internal Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-009-1143-1

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