Mostrando postagens com marcador Medical School. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Medical School. Mostrar todas as postagens

sábado, 19 de janeiro de 2019

Med Schools recruitment



This doctor thinks medical schools should recruit more like Google and other tech companies

 

  • Jefferson Health's Stephen Klasko says medical schools are designed to "suck the creativity" out of their students.
  • Medical schools need to change their recruitment process and take a page from Google and other tech companies, he says.










Jefferson Health's Steve Klasko walking through campus.
Jefferson Health
Jefferson Health's Steve Klasko walking through campus.


Dr. Stephen Klasko, the president of Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia and CEO of Jefferson Health, says that medical schools have the recruiting process all wrong.

In an age of advanced technology, they're still choosing students who can reel off organic chemistry compounds, rather than screening for qualities like critical thinking, entrepreneurship and empathy. Once students arrive, they're being asked to spend years on rote memorization.

It's a system designed to "suck the creativity out of physicians," Klasko said, while encouraging them to compete with each other, rather than collaborate.

Klasko is pushing Thomas Jefferson along a different path, one that's similarly being followed by Mount Sinai, Yale and Stanford. They're all seeking ways to find candidates that may not be obvious targets for medical school by using techniques that are well known to tech companies. Klasko's son once interviewed for a job at Google, and "they didn't want to see a transcript," he said. Recruiters asked him a series of questions to see whether he could come up with creative solutions on the fly.

Klasko has worked with a firm called Teleos Leaders, which has clients ranging from Cisco to IBM, to develop a program to select medical students on the basis of their emotional intelligence.

"We need to make medical students more human," Klasko said in an interview. "The way things are today is that you can be the most antisocial person in the room, but if we train you to pass a multiple choice test you can go and treat sick patients."

Jefferson is tapping humanities departments, design universities and drama schools to convince young graduates to consider a career in medicine. It has a partnership with Princeton University that allows about a dozen Princeton undergraduates each year to take the minimum number of science courses and study any other subjects they wish before attending medical school at Jefferson.

It also has a program that trains students in design thinking under Bon Ku, an emergency room physician who was described by a local publication as "one of the coolest docs in Philadelphia." Ku graduated with a degree in classics and was terrible at math.

FlexMed at New York's Mount Sinai allows college sophomores in any major to apply for early acceptance. Students in humanities have proven to be just as successful as those with a science background, and they're more likely to choose primary care or psychiatry as a specialty, which are both areas facing shortages. Other med schools like Yale and Stanford are offering art appreciation courses alongside traditional subjects like pathology and microbiology.

 

The role of AI in medicine

Ku predicts that as artificial intelligence become more prominent, memorization skills will become far less relevant.

"We still need the basic memorization of scientific knowledge, but no human can possibly keep up," Ku told CNBC. "Medical knowledge is doubling at this crazy rate. So instead there should be a greater emphasis on creative problem solving."

Klasko sees a future in which technology will be used to provide an immediate list of drugs for a particular case and offer clinical decision support tools to make a diagnosis. That will free doctors up to spend time listening to their patients, improving their surgical techniques or learning new skills.

Klasko has a real-life example. He said that in his career as an obstetrician and gynecologist, he's delivered thousands of babies. While most are fairly routine, occasionally an infant is born unexpectedly with a genetic disease like Down Syndrome. In such cases, parents will often ask him what it all means.

They don't want a detailed explanation of the chromosomal anomaly, but rather to understand how to deal with this new reality and how to be proper caregivers. Sometimes they just to talk to someone about their hopes and fears.

"At some point, the real bar should be whether or not you can actually listen to patients and talk to them," Klasko said.

sábado, 22 de setembro de 2018

Cursos irregulares de Medicina


 

 

Universidad "mau" estafa a estudiantes brasileños

 



Local de universidad MAU en CDE. Están estafando a los estudiantes brasileños.

La Universidad Central del Paraguay (UCP), que es MAU, está estafando a jóvenes brasileños. La mayor parte de los que estudian allí vienen del Brasil, y están siendo engañados. Todo lo que están cursando no les servirá para nada. La casa de estudios no puede otorgar a los mismos los títulos. La misma sigue funcionando ante la SUGESTIVA desidia de los organismos del Estado encargados en el control y fiscalización de las universidades en el país.

Profesionales consultados indicaron que corresponde que la universidad mau, sea inmediatamente CLAUSURADA. El Consejo Nacional de Educación Superior (Cones) tiene habilitado a 50 universidades en el país, y en la lista no aparece la Universidad Central del Paraguay (UCP).

Karlos Bernardo, directivo de la UCP, muy cerca de Ruth Benítez Perrier, madre de “Marito” durante la recepción del evento.
 
La casa de estdios superiores que está funcionando al margen de las normas legales tiene sede de Asunción, Ciudad del Este, Minga Guazú, y en Pedro Juan Caballero.

En la sede ubicada en Ciudad del Este, sobre la avenida Mariscal Estigarribia, o avenida del Lago, se puede ver una inmensa cantidad de vehículos con chapa del Brasil. Son los estudiantes quienes vienen desde el país vecino para estudiar, pero en realidad están siendo estafados.

Los mismos hasta podrían recibir sus títulos, pera también será MAU. O sea, no les servirá. En caso de que la UCP consiga su habilitación, por norma, todo lo que ya hicieron no sirve. Con esto los estudiantes deberán comenzar de nuevo. No se les puede reconocer lo que ya estudiaron.

Edgar Dávalos
 
Los responsables de la universidad MAU utilizan la imagen de Ruth “Manón” Benítez Perrier, quien es madre del presidente de la República, Mario Abdo Benítez y del ministro de Hacienda, Benigno López, para protegerse. La misma además estaría vinculada al narcotráfico.

Las fotos de la madre del presidente Marito y del ministro de Hacienda, participando de los actos organizado por la universidad mau, tienen un solo objetivo. Evitar que los organismos correspondientes intervengan en el caso de la institución ilegal.

Los que están detrás de todo este esquema de sobornos y presiones, según nuestras fuentes, son: Karlos Bernardo, directivo de la UCP y Edgar Dávalos, administrador de la casa de estudios. Éstos tendrían estrechas relaciones con bandas criminales, especialmente los que operan en el tráfico de drogas, tanto en Pedro Juan Caballero como en Alto Paraná.

domingo, 25 de março de 2018

US Med Schools Ranking



U.S.News ranks 'Best Medical Schools 2019'

By Alyssa Rege 

U.S. News' rankings for the top medical schools for research and primary care are part of the publication's annual "2019 Best Graduate Schools" lists, which recognize the top institutions for several graduate programs, including business, education, law, engineering, nursing and medicine. The publication also published new rankings this year for graduate programs in other popular disciplines, including biological sciences, chemistry, public affairs, social work and criminology.
Researchers noted this year's list decreased emphasis on medical schools' perceived reputation by 10 percentage points, and added four new factors to measure the amount in nonfederal and non-National Institutes of Health research grant funding institutions received.
Here are the top 10 medical schools for research, including ties, as ranked by U.S. News.
1. Harvard Medical School
2. The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine (Baltimore)
3. NYU School of Medicine (New York City)
3. Stanford (Calif.) University School of Medicine
5. UC San Francisco School of Medicine
6. Mayo Clinic School of Medicine (Rochester, Minn.)
6. Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia)
8. David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA (Los Angeles)
8. Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
10. Duke University School of Medicine (Durham, N.C.)
Here are the top 10 medical schools for primary care, including ties, as ranked by U.S. News.

 

1. UNC School of Medicine (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
2. UC San Francisco School of Medicine
3. UW School of Medicine (Seattle)
4. David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA (Los Angeles)
5. Baylor College of Medicine (Houston)
5. OHSU School of Medicine (Portland, Ore.)
7. University of Michigan Medical School (Ann Arbor)
8. Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia)
9. University of Colorado School of Medicine (Aurora)
10. UC Davis School of Medicine (Sacramento, Calif.)

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Methodology: 2019 Best Medical Schools Rankings






For the U.S. News rankings of the Best Medical Schools for Research, the 144 medical schools accredited in 2017 by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education and the 33 schools of osteopathic medicine accredited in 2017 by the American Osteopathic Association were surveyed in fall 2017 and early 2018. Of those 177 schools, 124 responded and provided the data needed to calculate the rankings based on the indicators used in the medical school research model.
U.S. News surveyed the same 177 medical schools at the same time for the primary care rankings, and the same 124 schools provided the data needed to calculate those rankings.
Both rankings are based on a weighted average of indicators, which are outlined below. The medical school research model is based on 12 indicators, and the primary care model is based on seven indicators.
Four of the data indicators are used in both the research and primary care ranking models. They are the student selectivity admissions statistics (MCAT, GPA and acceptance rate) and faculty-student ratio. The medical school research model factors in research activity; the medical school primary care model adds a measure of the proportion of M.D. graduates entering primary care specialties.
Quality Assessment (weighted by .30 for the research medical school model and .40 for the primary care medical school model)
• Peer assessment score (0.15 for the research medical school model, a decrease from 0.20 last year; 0.25 for the primary care medical school model): In fall 2017, medical and osteopathic school deans, deans of academic affairs and heads of internal medicine or directors of admissions were asked to rate programs on a scale from 1 (marginal) to 5 (outstanding). Those individuals who did not know enough about a school to evaluate it fairly were asked to mark "don't know."
Respondents were asked to rate program quality for both research and primary care programs separately on a single survey instrument. Thirty-one percent of those surveyed responded.
A school's score is the average rating of all the respondents who rated it; average scores were then sorted in descending order. Responses of "don't know" counted neither for nor against a school.
• Assessment score by residency directors (0.15 for the research medical school model, a decrease from 0.20 last year; 0.15 for the primary care medical school model): In fall 2017, as in previous years, residency program directors were also asked to rate programs using the same five-point scale on two separate survey instruments.
One survey dealt with research and was sent to a sample of residency program directors in fields outside primary care, including surgery, psychiatry and radiology. The other survey involved primary care and was sent to residency directors designated by schools as mainly involved in the primary care fields of family practicepediatrics and internal medicine.
]Survey recipients were asked to rate programs on a scale from 1 (marginal) to 5 (outstanding). Those individuals who did not know enough about a program to evaluate it fairly were asked to mark "don't know."
A school's score is the average rating of all the respondents who rated it in the three most recent years of survey results. Responses of "don't know" counted neither for nor against a school.
The medical schools themselves supplied the names of all of the residency program directors who were sent either of the residency program director surveys.
This year for the first time in the medical school primary care rankings, schools that received fewer than a total of 10 ratings from residency program directors in the three most recent years of the residency program directors survey received the lowest score achieved by any ranked primary care medical school for the purposes of calculating the rankings. These programs display an "N/A" instead of a residency program directors assessment score on usnews.com.
Ipsos Public Affairs collected the assessment data.
Research Activity (weighted by 0.40 in the research medical school model only, an increase from 0.30 last year; not used in the primary care medical school ranking model)
This year for the first time, based on suggestions from medical school deans, U.S. News added four new indicators of research activity to account for all the research conducted at medical schools: total non-NIH federal research activity, average non-NIH federal research activity per faculty member, total nonfederal research activity and average nonfederal research activity per faculty member. Each of these indicators was weighted at 0.025.
• Total NIH research activity (0.15): This is measured by the total dollar amount of NIH research grants awarded to the medical school and its affiliated hospitals, averaged for 2016 and 2017. An asterisk next to this data point in the rankings tables on usnews.com indicates that the medical school did not include grants to any affiliated hospitals in its 2017 total.
• Average NIH research activity per faculty member (0.15): This is measured by the dollar amount of NIH research grants awarded to the medical school and its affiliated hospitals per full-time faculty member, averaged over 2016 and 2017. Both full-time basic sciences and clinical faculty were used in the faculty count. An asterisk next to this data point in the rankings tables indicates that the medical school did not include grants to any affiliated hospitals in its 2017 total.
• Total non-NIH federal research activity (0.025): This is measured by the total dollar amount of non-NIH federal research awarded to the medical school and its affiliated hospitals in 2017. Examples of non-NIH federal sources include but are not limited to the Department of Defense, Office of Naval Research, National Science Foundation, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. An asterisk next to this data point in the rankings tables indicates that the medical school did not include grants to any affiliated hospitals in its 2017 total.
• Average non-NIH federal research activity per faculty member (0.025): This is measured by the dollar amount of non-NIH federal research grants awarded to the medical school and its affiliated hospitals per full-time faculty member in 2017. Both full-time basic sciences and clinical faculty were used in the faculty count. An asterisk next to this data point in the rankings tables indicates that the medical school did not include grants to any affiliated hospitals in its 2017 total.
• Total nonfederal research activity (0.025): This is measured by the total dollar amount of nonfederal research awarded to the medical school and its affiliated hospitals in 2017. Examples of non-NIH federal sources include but are not limited to corporations, associations, foundations, and state and local government funds. An asterisk next to this data point in the rankings tables indicates that the medical school did not include grants to any affiliated hospitals in its 2017 total.
• Average nonfederal research activity per faculty member (0.025): This is measured by the dollar amount of nonfederal research grants awarded to the medical school and its affiliated hospitals per full-time faculty member in 2017. Both full-time basic sciences and clinical faculty were used in the faculty count. An asterisk next to this data point in the rankings tables indicates that the medical school did not include grants to any affiliated hospitals in its 2017 total.
Primary Care Rate (0.30 in the primary care medical school model only; not used in research medical school ranking model)
The percentage of a school's M.D. or D.O. graduates entering primary care residencies in the fields of family practice, pediatrics and internal medicine was averaged over 2015, 2016 and 2017.
Student Selectivity (0.20 in the research medical school model; 0.15 in the primary care medical school model)
• Median MCAT total score (0.13 in the research medical school model; 0.0975 in the primary care medical school model): This is the median total Medical College Admission Test score of the 2017 entering class. For the second consecutive year, both the new MCAT that was implemented starting in April 2015 and the old MCAT were used in the rankings to compute the MCAT score indicator.
For both MCAT measures used in the ranking calculations, the median total scores for both the new and old versions were first converted to a common percentile scale and weighted by the proportion of the fall 2017 entering class who reported each test.
On usnews.com, only users with a U.S. News Medical School Compass subscription can view the new and old MCAT scores.
• Median undergraduate GPA (0.06 in the research medical school model; 0.045 in the primary care medical school model): This is the median undergraduate GPA of the 2017 entering class.
• Acceptance rate (0.01 in the research medical school model; 0.0075 in the primary care medical school model): This is the proportion of applicants for the 2017 entering class who were offered admission.
Faculty resources (0.10 in the research medical school model; 0.15 in the primary care medical school model): Faculty resources were measured as the ratio of full-time science and full-time clinical faculty to full-time M.D. or D.O. students in 2017.
For the second consecutive year, U.S. News used a logarithmic transformation of the original value for the faculty-student ratio since it had a skewed distribution. This logarithmic manipulation rescaled the data and allowed for a more normalized and uniform spread of values across the indicator.
After this indicator was normalized using a log value, its indicator z-score was calculated from the log values. In statistics, a z-score is a standardized score that indicates how many standard deviations a data point is from the mean of that variable. This transformation of the data is essential when combining diverse information into a single ranking because it allows for fair comparisons between the different types of data.
Overall Rank
Indicators were standardized about their means, and standardized scores were weighted, totaled and rescaled so that the top school received 100; other schools received their percentage of the top score. Medical schools were then numerically ranked in descending order based on their scores.
Specialty Rankings
These rankings, which include pediatrics and internal medicine, are based solely on ratings by medical school deans and senior faculty from the list of schools surveyed.
This year for the first time, U.S. News conducted specialty rankings in anesthesiology, obstetrics and gynecology, psychiatry, radiology and surgery. These fields were added based on suggestions from medical schools deans to better reflect the curriculum taught at medical schools.
Survey respondents each identified up to 10 schools offering the best programs in each specialty area.
Those schools receiving the most votes in each specialty are numerically ranked in descending order based on the number of nominations they received, as long as the school or program received seven or more nominations in that specialty area. This means that schools ranked at the bottom of each specialty ranking have received at least seven nominations.
The specialty areas of drug and alcohol abuse, family medicine, geriatrics, rural medicine and women's health are no longer surveyed.
Rank Not Published
For both research medical schools and primary care medical schools, U.S. News has numerically ranked the top three-fourths of the schools. The bottom quarter of the research medical schools and primary care medical schools are listed as Rank Not Published.
Rank Not Published means that U.S. News calculated a numerical rank for that school but decided for editorial reasons not to publish it. U.S. News will supply schools listed as Rank Not Published with their numerical ranks if they submit a request following the procedures listed in the Information for School Officials.
Schools marked as Ranked Not Published are listed alphabetically.
Unranked
 
If a school is marked as Unranked, that means that U.S. News did not calculate a numerical rank because the school did not supply enough key statistical data to be numerically ranked. Unranked schools are listed alphabetically below those marked as Rank Not Published.

quarta-feira, 14 de março de 2018

Semana do Calouro



CAMEM promove a Semana do Calouro 2018

No período de 12 a 16 de março de 2018, o CAMEM - Centro Acadêmico de Medicina de Maringá - UEM, promove a Semana do Calouro 2018, um evento que tem como objetivo melhorar a experiência de entrada dos acadêmicos na universidade. Nesta semana de atividades,serão apresentadas a estrutura da universidade, a estrutura curricular do curso de Medicina, a importância de atividades extracurriculares e do cuidado com a saúde mental ao longo do curso, entre outros assuntos.





Em especial, no dia 15 de março à noite teremos o CinemedUEM, com a participação dos novos alunos e suas famílias, além de alunos, professores e funcionários da MED-UEM e convidados.