Fundamental components of a curriculum for residents in health advocacy

Med Teach. 2008;30(7):e178-83. doi: 10.1080/01421590802139757.

Abstract

Purpose: To develop components of a curriculum for teaching and evaluating Residents as health advocates.

Method: Modeled on the Delphi technique, the first step involved a multidisciplinary panel of 10 Queen's University health care providers with expertize in education and patient advocacy. In the context of four Advocacy questions: What is it?, Who does it?, How to teach it?, and How to evaluate it?, they discussed a curriculum framework including graded education, scholarly activity, role modeling, and case examples. In the second step, 24 faculty experts addressed two goals: (1) to identify attributes discussed by the expert panel in step 1 and corresponding measurable behaviours and (2) to refine the curriculum framework proposed in step 1 with emphasis on content and evaluation.

Results: Six attributes of a health advocate were identified; knowledgeable, altruistic, honest, assertive, resourceful, and up-to date. Behaviours that reflect these attributes were identified as desirable or undesirable and means of teaching were matched to the attributes. For most residents, skills would be developed in a graded fashion, progressing from advocating for the individual to society as a whole.

Conclusions: This study provides a general framework from which specialty-specific curriculums for training health advocates can be developed.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Consumer Advocacy / education*
  • Curriculum*
  • Delphi Technique
  • Educational Measurement
  • Humans
  • Internship and Residency*
  • Program Development*