Title: Assessment and Integration of IMG Physicians into Family Practice
1 Assessment and Integration of IMG Physicians into
Family Practice
Robert F. Maudsley1, Cameron D. Little1, D. Bruce
Holmes2, 1College of Physicians and Surgeons of
Nova Scotia 2Dalhousie University Faculty of
Medicine
2Nova Scotia
3- Clinician Assessment for Practice Program (CAPP)
- A program of the College of Physicians and
Surgeons of Nova Scotia (CPSNS) - A 3 part program assesses IMG physicians,
resident in Canada, for practice readiness
without formal Canadian training - Developed in collaboration with Dalhousie Faculty
of Medicine and others
4- Why CAPP?
-
- Significant physician attrition in next 5-10
years - Dalhousie Faculty of Medicine unable to meet
shortfall - Family physicians needed immediately in Nova
Scotia
5Special Features of CAPP
- focus is on determining readiness to enter family
practice without additional formal Canadian
training - 12 month mentorship
- measures of performance
- CME component
6CAPP Prerequisites
- must be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident
- graduated abroad
- trained and practised abroad at least 3 years
- out of practice less than 5 years
- no test of English required
- must be referred by a medical regulatory
authority - credentials reviewed by referring authority
7The CAPP Process
- Three part program
- A. Initial Assessment
- competence assessment by OSCE Therapeutics exam
- B. mentorship with a family physician-12 months
- Performance assessment
- C. additional three years of defined license,
until Canadian Family Medicine certification and
Medical Council of Canada licentiate achieved
8The CAPP Process
- Part A
- 1) Clinical Assessment (OSCE)
- Clinical knowledge
- Diagnostic skills
- Communicating skills
- Doctor-patient relationship
- 2) Therapeutics Assessment (written exam)
Report provided to regulatory authority by CAPP
- Part B
- College considers defined license
- Sponsor identified (DHA)
- Mentorship formalized
- Educational plan developed
- Practice-based assessment by external assessor at
4-6 months - Multi-source assessment at 10 months
After one year
- Part C
- All reports and assessments reviewed by College
- Continuation of defined license, conditions and
further follow-up decided - Reassessment as necessary
- Educational plan reviewed and new needs identified
9Part A OSCE
- Cases mirror a typical physician workday
- Cases developed by physicians
- Candidates expected to exhibit a whole patient
approach - Fourteen 10-minute stations
- Trained examiners-all active family practitioners
- Trained simulated patients
- Not a pass or fail exam
- an assessment of strengths and weaknesses
10Part A2 Therapeutics Exam
- Three-hour written exam
- - clinical vignettes short answer questions
- Developed by a panel of physicians
- Designed to explore candidates knowledge of
common therapeutic agents - Domains of pharmacotherapy, adverse drug effects,
disease prevention and health promotion
11CAPP Report
- Prepared by the Chief Examiner and CAPP Executive
Director - A comprehensive narrative report supplied by the
CAPP to candidate - Same report provided to referring licensing
authority - One factor considered in licensure decision
- Provides feedback and serves as needs assessment
for Part B
12CAPP Report
- - History taking
- Physical examination
- Diagnosis and management
- Clinical reasoning and decision making
- Public health/Medicolegal, and Safety
- Professional/Ethical Behaviour
- - Communications skills rated by SP and PE
- Spoken English
- Therapeutics exam
13The CAPP Process
- Part A
- 1) Clinical Assessment (OSCE)
- Clinical knowledge
- Diagnostic skills
- Communicating skills
- Doctor-patient relationship
- 2) Therapeutics Assessment (written exam)
Report provided to regulatory authority by CAPP
- Part B
- College considers defined license
- Sponsor identified (DHA)
- Mentorship formalized
- Educational plan developed
- Practice-based assessment by external assessor at
4-6 months - Multi-source assessment at 10 months
After one year
- Part C
- All reports and assessments reviewed by College
- Continuation of defined license, conditions and
further follow-up decided - Reassessment as necessary
- Educational plan reviewed and new needs identified
14Part B
- Nine District Health Authorities (DHAs) in Nova
Scotia - DHAs in collaboration with provincial Dept. of
Health (DOH) identify family physician needs - DHA Medical Chief of Staff serves as sponsor
- DHAs and DOH coordinate site visits to designated
communities. - Roles of sponsors and mentors described in the
Provincial Medical Act
15Part B Mentorship
- An established family physician in the community
is a mentor for 12 months - Mentor proposed by DHA and approved by CPSNS
- Mentor prepared in a workshop and have mentors
manual - Mentorship Coordinator provides ready support
16Part B Mentorship
- Mentors expected to spend 4-5 hours per week
- Mentors are compensated
- Following satisfactory 2-4 week initial phase of
practice, Mentor, sponsor, and IMG physician
enter into formal agreement approved by
Department of Health - During the 12 months, mentor provides periodic
progress reports to physician, sponsor and CAPP
17Part B CME
- Dalhousie faculty member serves as CME advisor
- Initial meeting of CAPP physician with CME
advisor - Advisor has Report, past training and experience,
and procedural skills checklist - Initial CME plan developed and shared with mentor
- Follow-up re implementation of plan
- Emphasis on reflective practice
18Part B Performance Assessment
- At 4-6 months, an external assessor visits the
practice and provides a detailed report to
physician, mentor, sponsor and CAPP - CAPP follows-up with areas of concern
- Assessor is active family physician
- Protocol includes chart review and stimulated
chart recall - CME plan may be modified
19Part B Performance Assessment
- At 10 months, multi-source feedback
questionnaires are used seeking views of
patients, physicians, and other health
professionals, as well as a self-appraisal - Questionnaires have been validated
- Results sent to physician, mentor, sponsor and
CAPP
20The CAPP Pyramid
Mentorship, 360 Evaluation, On-site
assessment
Does
Shows how
OSCE
OSCE Questions, Therapeutics Exam
Knows how
Therapeutics Written Exam, MCCQE1
Knows
21The CAPP Process
- Part A
- 1) Clinical Assessment (OSCE)
- Clinical knowledge
- Diagnostic skills
- Communicating skills
- Doctor-patient relationship
- 2) Therapeutics Assessment (written exam)
Report provided to regulatory authority by CAPP
- Part B
- College considers defined license
- Sponsor identified (DHA)
- Mentorship formalized
- Educational plan developed
- Practice-based assessment by external assessor at
4-6 months - Multi-source assessment at 10 months
After one year
- Part C
- All reports and assessments reviewed by College
- Continuation of defined license, conditions and
further follow-up decided - Reassessment as necessary
- Educational plan reviewed and new needs identified
22Part C Continuing Practice and Learning
- At 12 months all reports reviewed by CPSNS
- Continuation of defined licence (with any
conditions) - Need for continuation of formal mentorship
determined - Sponsorship continues
- In next 3 years must successfully achieve
certification of the College of Family Physicians
of Canada and Medical Council of Canada
licentiate.
23Progress of CAPP Candidates
24Candidate Profile (N128)
- Gender
- male - 45 female - 55
- Countries of Graduation 25
- South Asia 52
- Middle East 23
- Eastern Europe/Russia 10
- Years of Graduation
- 1970-1980 16
- 1981-1990-46
- 1991-2000-35
25CAPP Funding
- CAPP developed by support of CPSNS
- Part A candidate fee 5500 CDN
- Part B supported by Dept. of Health
- (mentors, CME, on-site assessment, MSF
assessment) - CAPP physicians receive a salary for first 12
months - 3 full-time, 2 part-time CAPP staff
26Modifications to the Program (2006)
- Orientation Program to begin Part B
- - 5 day, 10 module program
- CME protocol to better engage mentor in the
process - More emphasis on clinical reasoning and clinical
decision making in the OSCE
27Summary
- CPSNS through its CAPP has implemented a program
to - - assess the practice readiness of IMG family
physicians. - - attract and retain IMGs for practice in Nova
Scotia - - prepare IMGs to be successful family
physicians and achieve certification of the
College of Family Physicians of Canada
28Summary
- Next cohort scheduled for June 2007
- CAPP model can be extended to specialist
physicians and other health professions, with
appropriate modifications and resources
29www.capprogram.ca