Monday, October 2, 2023

Medicine department workflow with evidence based links driven by NMC and NAAC requirement prompts

Medicine department workflow:



Departmental Motto: Transparency and accountability through data capture and  sharing for real time peer review and audit as regular departmental workflow toward furthering the cause of true evidence based medicine at the same time preserving patient confidentiality in social media.

Sharing below under the NMC and NAAC prompts, some cherry picked evidence  from our departmental dashboard that archives links to thousands of student online learning portfolios containing even more number of archived hospital and community case report links here: http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2022/02/?m=0 as well as other archival site links such as here : https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvYjjuT_hEEQDtlHSAvFdRpCb5EBszwgR&feature=shared (minus the shorts that couldn't be playlisted) 

The rest of the volume in the above open access and other  encrypted archives are under further thematic data analytic processing as part of our ongoing projects.

We shall be discussing our workflow using the main prompts listed below primarily from the NMC guideline linked above along with secondary mention of the same from NAAC terminology prompts :


1) Departmental Physical infrastructure

2) Departmental Faculty (and learning participants) for actual teaching and research who also undertake necessary student learning activities on a regular and continued basis

3) Departmental Clinical material : Availability of adequate clinical material in terms of number of patients of different specialties

4)Departmental teaching methodology adopted 

5) Departmental Methods and modes of assessment, grading of the students

6) Departmental review of feedback from students

7) Departmental other parameters related to standards of medical education that may be added from time to time by the respective boards






1) Departmental Physical infrastructure (NMC prompt) 

Departmental Infrastructure 
and Learning
Resources (NAAC prompt):
4.1 Physical Facilities (NAAC sub prompt) 



A) Patient housing :

General and Special wards 


(video also presented during an AIIMS Bhuvaneshwar guest lecture by one of our faculty...check link to departmental presentations below )


(Ward rounds)

ICU 





Step down wards 




B) Instrument housing :

Large lab based Patient investigation tools housed in central labs 

Often shared in the case report links archived inside our student online portfolio dashboard here:  http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2022/02/?m=0 


Departmental radiology diagnostic equipment housed in ward:

Faculty demonstrating ultrasound guided procedures during to medical students here: https://youtu.be/KTTsp6kIkes?feature=shared

Ventilators, Dialysis machines and other smaller pumps in ICU 

https://youtu.be/5IdV6Q8ZfVA?feature=shared (in the background to the ultrasound machine which is housed in ICU) 

Departmental ultrasound usage (diagnostic non procedural) by faculty and students in action : 



2) Departmental Faculty (and learning participants) for actual teaching and research who also undertake necessary student learning activities on a regular and continued basis (NMC prompt): 

(NAAC sub prompt) 2.4 Teacher Profile and 
Quality


Faculty: 

Evidence of faculty teaching and research activities linked here in their online learning portfolio summaries available open access :

Online portfolio of our PG turned faculty:



Video online learning portfolios:





Other departmental senior faculty sample portfolios that are publicly accessible :


PGs : Yearwise online learning portfolios of all PGs accessible here: http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2022/02/?m=0 

PG 

UGs:  Yearwise online learning portfolios of all UGs accessible here: http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2022/02/?m=0 


Evidence of PG learning sessions linked here: 


Evidence of UG learning sessions linked here: 



3) Departmental Clinical material : Availability of adequate clinical material in terms of number of patients of different specialties:

Evidence of 1000s of Clinical material created in UG PG learning portfolios in the  departmental dashboard accessible here: http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2022/02/?m=0 that also depicts the...


Variety of patients to fulfil all round training of students:


Variety of procedures:


Laboratory investigations:


Radiological investigations: 


Other relevant investigations:


Electrophysiology :


Our clinical material and clinical learning ecosystem is also captured and synthesized overall in this specially made clinical video case report here :  
showcasing one of our clinical cases that received an honorarium from an US institute https://tu.edu/programs/medical-health-sciences/faculty/ facilitated by our collaborator there, Prof Chitra Pai. This other than our summary video of our entire clinical workflow here 
https://youtu.be/xvE5b8Xk3vM?feature=shared , shared previously in AIIMS Bhuvaneshwar. 




4) Departmental teaching methodology adopted (and it's assessment, NMC prompt):

1. Curricular
Aspects
1.1 *(U)Curriculum Design and
Development (NAAC prompt)
1.2 Academic Flexibility (NAAC prompt) 
1.3 Curriculum Enrichment (NAAC ")
2. Teaching-
Learning and 
Evaluation (NAAC prompt) 
2.3 Teaching-Learning
Process (NAAC ")

Our teaching methodology leverages currently available blended learning modalities to create a case based blended learning ecosystem CBBLE first published here : https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29996517/



Blended learning components:

9:00 AM to 11:00AM Offline inpatient experiential data capture and synchronous face to face discussion  and follow up 

Illustrative videos: 



11:00 AM to 1:00 PM Offline outpatient experiential data capture and synchronous face to face discussion in the demo room 


And subsequent community follow up and family adoption through online PaJR groups which are the online components of our blended learning ecosystem often described in the past as "user driven healthcare" which has it's own big fat text book here :  https://www.amazon.in/User-Driven-Healthcare-Narrative-Medicine-Collaborative/dp/1609600975
as well as had a journal with the same name since 2011 here: https://www.igi-global.com/journal/international-journal-user-driven-healthcare/41022

PaJR publications and ongoing OPD projects to create persistent clinical encounters :



2:00 PM to 4:00 PM offline (and 
beyond that blended 24x7 online) 


Journal clubs: Hands on learning around critical appraisal of research and evidence based medicine

The following illustration is from our case based 

blended learning ecosystem, the online component 

of which happens in social media groups such as 

whatsapp. 

Online asynchronous : http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2021/08/third-semester-students-hands-on.html?m=0

Offline synchronous : 

https://youtu.be/LXy4FM6NBXA?feature=shared

Seminars: 

Dr Aditya Covid :

https://youtu.be/unW70mGlh1Y?feature=shared

Prof Meltzer Behchets disease : 

https://youtu.be/IX3Mz2Y1teE?feature=shared

Prof Sturmberg :

https://youtu.be/2lBlfz9dNvc?feature=shared

Flipped classroom discussions: 

https://youtu.be/VjF9eGfOaSk?feature=shared

Case discussions: 

https://youtu.be/QhjiomY-S74?feature=shared

Dr Manasa :

https://youtu.be/3VVH7w3rWSM?feature=shared

Group discussions: 

Dr Aditya : 


Dr Nikita:


Didactic clinical methods:


Respiratory movement (and cognitive clinical bias) :


Reflexes:


Joint position sense :


UG Peer to peer learning:


 https://youtu.be/XrY8f8m_3oQ?feature=shared (Respiratory Examination)


Thesis review :

Dr Rashmita : 

Procedural competences:

UG ascitic tap :

Anahita 3rd semester (under PG Dr Sai Charan's supervision)  : https://youtu.be/8WsoVLLHKWY?feature=shared

Hyndavi 9th semester (under PG Dr K Vaishnavi's supervision) 


PG various procedures :

IJV, LP, Pericardiocentesis, Renal biopsy 




5) Departmental Methods and modes of assessment, grading of the students (NMC prompt):
2.5 Evaluation Process and
Reforms
2.6 Student Performance and
Learning Outcomes (NAAC prompt) 

Medicine department 360 degree formative and summative assessment and grading at end of UG/PG other than the traditional university driven summative assessment approaches  : http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2023/09/submitted-internship-competence.html?m=1

This month's single observer and patient driven  blended learning Mini-Clinical Evaluation Exercise (mini-cex) sample:


Quantitative evaluation : 65/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Takes initiative, trainable, Hardworking, sincere

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more 


Quantitative evaluation : 50/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 




Quantitative evaluation : 40/100
Extension 20 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if she's trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 

4) went on USMLE leave midway 


Extension : 30 days 

5) Did not report at all 

Extension  60 days 

More of this month's single observer mini-CEX linked here: 
Comprehensive assessment in terms of Bloom's taxonomy and the specified rubric questions around the student's written sample from his/her online learning portfolio here: 


**1. Bloom's Taxonomy driven Evaluation:**

- **Level 1 Knowledge (Remembering):** The intern successfully gathers basic patient information such as history, presenting complaints, personal and family history, and examination findings. This demonstrates knowledge application at the remembering level.

- **Level 2 Comprehension (Understanding):** The intern understands the patient's condition by correlating the symptoms, physical findings, and laboratory results. This level of comprehension is evident in the diagnosis section.

- **Level 3 Application (Applying):** The intern applies medical knowledge by ordering relevant investigations like serology, RBS, B.urea, S.Cr, and ECG, and interprets these results to make a diagnosis. They also prescribe medications and treatment, which reflects the application of medical interventions.

- ** Level 4 Analysis (Analyzing):** The report lacks in-depth analysis of the patient's condition. While a diagnosis is provided, there is limited discussion of the underlying pathophysiology or potential differential diagnoses. An in-depth analysis would involve considering various possibilities and critically evaluating them.

**Level 5 Evaluation (Evaluating):** The report does not include an evaluation of the effectiveness of the treatment plan, the potential complications, or the overall management strategy. This is an important aspect that could improve the report's quality.

- **Level 6 Synthesis (Creating):** The intern does not demonstrate synthesis in the report. They do not connect the patient's condition to broader medical concepts or research. Synthesis would involve exploring how this case fits into the larger context of COPD, acute cor pulmonale, and other related conditions.

**2. Rubric Evaluation:**

Rubric formulated here : 

- **General Knowledge Learning Points:** The report provides basic information about the patient's condition, such as symptoms, examination findings, and lab results. However, it lacks insights into the broader implications or epidemiology of COPD or acute cor pulmonale. It also doesn't reference external sources or guidelines for further context.

- **Discovery-Driven Learning Questions:** The report mentions the patient's history and symptoms but does not delve into specific questions related to the internal or external medicine aspects of the case. It could benefit from exploring questions like the cause of the acute exacerbation, the role of smoking cessation, or the relationship between COPD and heart failure.

- **Clinical Complexity:** The report briefly touches on the patient's clinical complexity, mentioning comorbidities like diabetes and hypertension. However, a deeper analysis of the biological, psychological, and social aspects of the patient's condition is lacking.

- **Thematic Analysis:** The report does not conduct a thematic analysis of the patient's case or identify overarching themes that could provide insights or guidance for future management.

- **Impact on Patient Outcomes:** The report does not discuss the potential positive or negative impacts of the diagnosis and treatment on the patient's short-term and long-term outcomes.

- **Competence of the Intern:**
  - (i) **Competence in Data Capture:** The intern successfully captures the patient's data, including history, examination findings, and lab results.
  - (ii) **Competence in Asking Questions:** The report lacks in-depth questioning and exploration of the case. It does not effectively sort themes for thematic analysis.
  - (iii) **Competence in Finding Answers:** The intern makes a diagnosis and prescribes treatment but does not engage in in-depth analysis or exploration of new knowledge.
  - (iv) **Competence in Communication:** The report could improve in communicating the case's learning points effectively, particularly in relation to how the findings could influence patient outcomes and future research.

In summary, while the medical report demonstrates competence at the knowledge and comprehension levels of Bloom's taxonomy, it falls short in terms of analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. Additionally, it lacks depth in addressing the rubric's questions related to clinical complexity, thematic analysis, and the impact on patient outcomes. Enhancing critical thinking and providing more comprehensive insights would improve the report's quality." 


More log book assessment and student work audit prompts practiced in the department here : http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2021/09/log-book-audit-as-medical-student.html?m=0

PGs weekly log assessment :


6) Departmental review of feedback from students (NMC prompt) :
2.7 Student satisfaction Survey (NAAC prompt) 


Analysis of anonymized student feedback regarding Medicine department

Summary : This is a single observer review and analysis of student feedback regarding teaching delivery and formative assessment of medicine department received from a batch of students finishing their degree and on their way to finish the final hurdle of the university. The validity of this anonymized feedback appeared high as students had fearlessly opened their heart outs and well addressed our negatives as we had ensured that we were properly blinded to their identity.

The entire feedback in images of their hand written notes can be accessed here: https://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2023/10/analysis-of-anonymized-student-feedback.html?m=1
The feedback has been analyzed and problem statements identified as well as solutions planned. 

7) Departmental other parameters related to standards of medical education that may be added from time to time by the respective boards ( NMC prompt):

3. Research, 
Innovations
and Extension
3.1 Promotion of Research and 
Facilities
3.2 Resource Mobilization for 
Research
3.3 Innovation Ecosystem 30 10 NA 10
3.4 Research Publications (NAAC prompt) 

Departmental Publications :

2023 (KNRUHS format) 


Older 2021-17 (NAAC dsir format) 


Departmental Presentations:

2023-22:


Older 2021-17




Ongoing thesis projects:


Ongoing projects: 

https://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2023/10/ongoing-medical-cognition-projects-in.html?m=1

Ethical clearances :


Outreach : 

PaJR family adoption pan India :



SO  WHAT?? 


S

trengths 

Cherry picked and shared above 

W


eaknesses

Hint: A system is only as competent and efficient as it's individual components and participants 

On a scale of 1-10 rating would be...


O

pportunities

NAAC prompts: 3.5 Consultancy 
3.6 Extension Activities
3.7 Collaboration 
7. Institutional 
Values and 
Best Practices and 
Social Responsibilities
7.3 Institutional Distinctiveness 

T

hreats  



Ongoing medical cognition projects in medicine department

Ongoing projects in medicine other than the departmental post graduate thesis are all centred around "medical cognition" and optimizing clinical complexity using medical cognition tools. 


Other than routine medical cognition tools of  system 1 eyeballing pattern recognition, we use routine tools of system 2 asynchronous intelligence aka primordial AI aka academic learning to solve real patient problems.

Developing the Medical metacognition problem statement at the beginning of the introduction to all our ongoing projects is because, it's at the core of all our projects using both system 1 and 2 cognitive processing:

System 2 thinking began as an asynchronous academic tool to make communication and thinking slower to suit our individual workflows. 

However this essence of academics also makes our three dimensional existential reality two dimensional as that helps to somehow better analyze our three dimensional existence manifest in daily random events and even manipulate the randomness toward apparently improved outcome events.

Of all the routine system 2 tools, we have been largely enamoured by a few that we have written about  in the past and  continue to use them daily in our community patient follow up and family adoption through online PaJR groups which are the online components of our case based blended learning ecosystem CBBLE and the two have evolved from what has been often described in the past as "user driven healthcare" which has it's own big fat text book here :  https://www.amazon.in/User-Driven-Healthcare-Narrative-Medicine-Collaborative/dp/1609600975
as well as had a journal with the same name since 2011 here: https://www.igi-global.com/journal/international-journal-user-driven-healthcare/41022

More about our tryst with "using medical cognition tools to optimize clinical complexity" in this 2023 guest lecture at AIIMS, Bhopal archived here: https://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2023/10/medicine-department-presentations-2023.html?m=1

Ethical clearance obtained for this major project stem here : http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2023/04/?m=0

Clinical professional development CPD organized on the theme of optimizing clinical complexity is 

Completed and published medical cognition projects :

Clinical complexity and PaJR tools 2023:  https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37335625/


Five ongoing old projects on the above theme :

1) Creating dynamic user driven ontologies : http://userdrivenhealthcare.blogspot.com/2022/?m=0





5) Collective, user driven conversational contextual peer review of real time open access research submissions and creation of dynamic user driven learning community ontologies UDLCO 



Current journal UDLCO :

Dr Tella Shruthi :



Ongoing projects previously shared in  2021 in the dsir template on request :


We can broadly divide our "medical cognition" into the right and left path. 

The right path projects are reasonably understandable from a modern perspective, while the left path projects are slightly post modern and may not be included in the offical departmental lists although they will still be linked appropriately in case someone visiting this site is curious. 



New projects using medical cognition tools :

1) Ongoing project : Sleep cycle longitudinal follow up study using frugal user driven sleep labs to determine the  impact of sleep patterns on development of NCDs. Elective student collaborator, Avinash Gupta from Bhairahva, Nepal and intern Dr Parvez Ansari from KIMS Narketpally, Prof Monika Pathania, AIIMS, Rishikesh 

Plant model collaborator TIFR CUBE lab Dr MC Arunan https://www.hbcse.tifr.res.in/research/past-projects/gnowledge-lab, Ms Swaha Saha, NJP and Dr Dinesh Datta, KMC, Warangal : 


Animal model TIFR CUBE lab collaborator Dr MC Arunan https://www.hbcse.tifr.res.in/research/past-projects/gnowledge-lab, Ms Swaha Saha, NJP
Dr Dinesh Datta, KMC, Warangal 


Pilot sleep studies done in our wards as part of the routine workflow:




A unique sleep pattern from personal tracker data and n of 1 intervention https://classworkdecjan.blogspot.com/2019/05/42-f-with-severe-regular-edema-with_17.html?m=1



Previous log of our ongoing sleep project in dsir template as requested from principal's office: http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2021/02/per-dsir-template.html?m=0

2) Ongoing project : Gait analysis: normal and abnormal patterns in relation to illness outcomes  PG student collaborator Dr Himaja, Intern Dr Kshitij from KIMS Narketpally. 
From University of Hyderabad, collaborator, Prof Nagendra and Dr Irfan 

Past work on this project by UoH :




Recent data capture from our ward :



3) Life style medicine project: Effect of daily energy intake monitoring in the form of food plate images and energy output in the form of hourly activities in improving outcomes through regular PaJR continuity
External collaborators from Pune studying AI tools in food plate optimization toward better outcomes and Prof Pathania with her life style pdcc student: https://aiimsrishikesh.edu.in/a1_1/?page_id=1081

Resources from and for our PaJR patients : http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2023/09/?m=0

4) Utilizing LLM tools to assess interns clinical competence depicted in their online learning portfolios. External collaborator Mr Rahul Kulkarni from Pune. https://www.linkedin.com/in/rahul10100/ and here's his video that shows his plan for how he can help mentor our health professional students and patients toward better life outcomes: https://youtu.be/wqZvp83cfbs?feature=shared

Internship assessment done by LLM showcased here as a single sample : http://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2023/09/submitted-internship-competence.html?m=1

5) Creating sample question paper through clinical vignettes taken from online learning portfolio case reports and reshaped into questions (MCQs, Long essay, short essay) using a large language model and human professor supervised learning
Project collaborators: Dr Tella Shruti, Dr Dinesh Datta, Mr Rahul Kulkarni


6) Creating persistent clinical encounters through first contact physician user driven EMRs followed by patient user driven PHRs (patient journey records PaJRs) collectively archived in dynamic case reports (EHRs):
Collaborators: Dr Manogyna intern and UGs from 3rd, 5th and 9th semester 

7) Early clinical exposure to patient vulnerability in social media and need to champion their privacy confidentiality through meticulous removal of patient and institutional identifiers along with valid informed consent during the conversion of three dimensional system 1 patient data to 2 dimensional system 2 patient data archived and continually evolving in dynamic online learning portfolios.







Medicine department presentations 2023-17

2023:


Faculty :

10 August 2023: AIIMS Bhopal: invited guest lecture 

Image of invitation :






YouTube link to lecture:


May 5, 

Y20 participants at AIIMS, Rishikesh
from our 3 Elective students, Vivek Podder,  post doctoral Miami cancer institute, Pranab Chatterjee, John Hopkins post doctoral  BhagyaJyoti Priyadarshini, Orissa and Dinesh Datta KIMS UG now KMC PG,  

Image :




Panelists, AI healthcare 


Above link can be scrolled to 6 hrs 27 minutes to find our students 


8 February 2023: Oman Medical college : invited guest lecture 

Image of invitation 




YouTube link to lecture :


PGs:

25th January 2023 : CPD on optimizing clinical complexity 

Dr Haripriya and Prof Michele Meltzer, Thomas Jefferson university, Philadelphia  

YouTube link :


Dr Chandana and Prof Sadhana Sharma, Malla Reddy Medical College, Hyderabad 

YouTube link :


Dr Raveen and Prof Murthy, Department of Surgery, KIMS, Narketpally 


Dr Saicharan and Prof Meltzer, Thomas Jefferson university, Philadelphia  


Faculty 

Key note address with Prof Joachim Sturmberg's, School of Medicine and Public Health, Faculty of Health and Medicine, University of Newcastle





2022:

PGs :

Dr Rashmita with Prof Binod Dhakal, Medical college of Wisconsin, https://www.mcw.edu/find-a-doctor/dhakal-binod-md



Dr Vaishnavi with Prof Meltzer, Thomas Jefferson university, Philadelphia  


Dr Aashita with Prof Akshay Anand, PGIMER, Chandigarh 


Overall write up on the Clinical problem solving CPD 2022: 






Sunday, October 1, 2023

End of posting osce and mini-CEX results announcement for 2018 batch posted in general medicine for August and September 2023

Summary : Pragmatic OSCEs and mini-CEX were conducted for each of the following interns listed below who were interned to the department of medicine for 45 days largely in August and September 2023, everyday in batches of four, while assessing them summatively on the days they were working face to face with the assessor both at OPD and IPD as well as following them up formatively everyday through their work logged in their online learning portfolios as well as PaJR groups in a user driven manner.  

And user driven submissions of online portfolio links on learning themes for 360 degree peer feedback and assessment submitted here :  https://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2023/09/submitted-internship-competence.html?m=1

Current batch list of interns and their quantitative and qualititative  assessments :

41 K  TEJASWINI 


Quantitative evaluation: 55/100
No extension (pass) 


Qualitative evaluation: Can do better 


42  K CHERISH 


Quantitative evaluation : 60/100
No extension (pass) 


Qualitative evaluation  : Takes initiative, trainable 
Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more 


43 K NIKHIL SAI 


Quantitative evaluation : 65/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Takes initiative, trainable, Hardworking, sincere

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more 

44 K VENGALA PRASANNA 


Quantitative evaluation : 50/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable, 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more 



45 K SAMPATH


Quantitative evaluation : 60/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable, Hardworking, sincere

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more 


46 K PHANI KEERTHANA


Quantitative evaluation : 55/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable, sincere

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more 


47 K  SHIREESHA 


Quantitative evaluation : 50/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more 


48 K CHETANA


Quantitative evaluation : 50/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


49 K TULSYAN



Quantitative evaluation : 55/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


50  K YAMINI ( went on USMLE leave midway )


Extension : 30 days 

51 KSHITIJ SHARMA



Quantitative evaluation : 55/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable, Takes initiative 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


52 K  NIKHILESHWAR


Quantitative evaluation : 45/100
Extension 20 days  

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable, Late starter 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


53 LASYA REDDY PESARU



Quantitative evaluation : 50/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable, Takes initiative 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 

54  M  PARDHU ( did not report atall) 

Extension  60 days 


55 M  SRIBINDU


Quantitative evaluation : 50/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


56 M  VINEETH


Quantitative evaluation : 30/100
Extension 30 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if he's trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


57 M  SANTHOSHINI



Quantitative evaluation : 40/100
Extension 20 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if she's trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


58 M AARTHI PRIYANKA


Quantitative evaluation : 50/100
No extension (pass) 

Qualitative evaluation  : Trainable

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


59 M BHARGAVI




Quantitative evaluation : 40/100
Extension 20 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if she's trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 

60 M HEMANTH

Quantitative evaluation : 40/100
Extension 20 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if he's trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 

FMG POSTED FROM 

1 st AUG TO 30 SEPT 

FMG 6 - Lakshmi Bhavya Popuri

Quantitative evaluation : 30/100
Extension 30 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if she's trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 



FMG 7 - Mahitha Pandurao Akireddy


Quantitative evaluation : 45/100
Extension 20 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if she's trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


FMG 8 - Mallavarapu Ramya Sri 

Quantitative evaluation : 40/100
Extension 30 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if she's trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


FMG 9 - Mohammad Ashraf 

Quantitative evaluation : 47/100
Extension 10 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if he's better trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 


FMG 10 - Nischal Cyril Kumar 

Quantitative evaluation : 40/100
Extension 20 days 

Qualitative evaluation  : Needs more extension to see if he's trainable 

Can focus on asking more questions and sharing and communicating more as well as maintaining continuity and consistency of work done 



Analysis of anonymized student feedback regarding Medicine department

Summary : This is a single observer review and analysis of student feedback regarding teaching delivery and formative assessment of medicine department received from a batch of students finishing their degree and on their way to finish the final hurdle of the university. The validity of this anonymized feedback appeared high as students had fearlessly opened their heart outs and well addressed our negatives as we had ensured that we were properly blinded to their identity.

The entire feedback in images of their hand written notes can be accessed here:https://37swetha.blogspot.com/2022/11/2018.html?m=1
The feedback has been analyzed and problem statements identified as well as solutions planned. 


Single observer analysis :

Clearly there is a gross mismatch with the departmental vision for the students learning and the students own vision of what their learning should be like and this post is to try and bridge this colossal gap. 


The departmental vision is to create physicians who are competent to understand a patient's problem through a proper clinical data capture (history, examination and investigations) and draw an optimal management plan tailored to the patient's requirements and ensure adequate follow up to support the patient's illness journey. 


The students vision apparent from the feedback is to pass their exams safely and learn standard clinical  skills that may not require the apparently humongous effort that they are having to put in compared to other subjects in their career journey. 


Also they are unable to sink their teeth into the kind of clinical skills we demand from them as they believe they haven't been taught anything and so we shouldn't expect them to know anything. 


Our current reading of this batch and most prior batches is that there are 5-10 students who can cope with the efforts necessary and the large majority is getting bulldozered and stressed out. 


Bottom line is lack of time as against a tremendous demand for efforts that appears unrealistic to the majority. 


Students want medicine to be broken down into bite sized conceptual chunks that may have palpable black and white outcomes but if we try to do that we will end up showing them an unreal picture of Medicine. What they are witnessing now through their own efforts to log a case is real medicine which is unfortunately disturbing as the messy real world of Medicine often is. However if we discount this discomfort now we shall only be delaying it and cause irreparable damage to their psyche when they are forced to face real medicine at a later date.  


What are the changes that the department can make from their side given the limited amount of time ? 


We can start the rounds after their last theory class at 10:15 AM sharp and students will need to assemble by each patient's bedside while we show them clinical skills during the rounds and then unfortunately we will still need to waste a lot of time trying to understand our real patient requirements that may feel like a waste now to students but will feel more useful with passage of time as they gain more competency in understanding patient requirements listening to their non linear narratives. 


What we need from the students? 


We need them to become active learners and transform from the passive learner role most of them have been forced into due to various reasons largely related to schooling. We need them to do their case based assignments and ask us questions at every step (asynchronously online) so that we can help them to create an impact on us and our patients. 

Ultimately it's this ability of theirs to create an impact on our learning ecosystem is what is most valuable and essentially what we are trying to assess. 


The online learning portfolios containing the case logged work of each medical student, are largely a platform for the medical students to demonstrate the impact of their learning on our department and patients in a manner that makes them become a valuable member of our team. This can enable us to demonstrate a clear correlation between their learning outcomes and patient outcomes. 


The way forward will not be easy but overcoming difficult paths can lead to better and greener pastures. 

Did the students provide valid feedback? 


The feedback collected from the students appears very valid as they have fearlessly addressed our negatives as we ensured that we were properly blinded to their identity 👇






Thursday, September 28, 2023

The Healthy plate diet in Bengali, Telegu

The copyright belongs to Harvard institution and this translation has been done by our patient advocates purely to help spread the message available in their publicly available (but not globally translated) webpage here :  https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/healthy-eating-plate/


Bengali :

āĻ†āĻŽাāĻĻেāĻ° āĻ–াāĻĻ্āĻ¯ āĻ¤াāĻ˛িāĻ•া āĻāĻŽāĻ¨ āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻ‰āĻšিā§Ž āĻ¯াāĻ¤ে āĻ†āĻŽাāĻĻেāĻ° āĻļāĻ°ীāĻ°েāĻ° āĻ“āĻœāĻ¨ āĻ¨া āĻŦৃāĻĻ্āĻ§ি āĻĒাā§Ÿ āĻāĻŦং āĻ†āĻŽাāĻĻেāĻ° āĻĒেāĻŸেāĻ° āĻĻৈāĻ°্āĻ˜ ā§Žā§Ļ āĻ¸েāĻ¨্āĻŸিāĻŽিāĻŸাāĻ°েāĻ° āĻ¨ীāĻšে āĻĨাāĻ•ে ।


āĻ•ী āĻ–াāĻŦেāĻ¨ āĻ¨া?


āĻšিāĻ¨ি āĻ†āĻ° āĻŽā§ŸāĻĻা āĻœাāĻ¤ীā§Ÿ āĻ–াāĻĻ্āĻ¯ āĻĒুāĻ°োāĻĒুāĻ°ি āĻŦāĻ¨্āĻ§। āĻŦিāĻ¸্āĻ•ুāĻŸ āĻ†āĻ° āĻĒাāĻ‰āĻ°ুāĻŸি āĻŽā§ŸāĻĻা āĻĻিā§Ÿে āĻ¤ৈāĻ°ি āĻ•āĻ°া āĻšā§Ÿ, āĻ¤াāĻ‡ āĻŦিāĻ¸্āĻ•ুāĻŸ āĻ“ āĻĒাāĻ‰āĻ°ুāĻŸি āĻ–াāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻŦāĻ¨্āĻ§ āĻ°াāĻ–ুāĻ¨। āĻ¤েāĻ˛ āĻŽাāĻ¸ে ā§Ģā§Ļā§Ļ āĻ—্āĻ°াāĻŽেāĻ° āĻŦেāĻļি āĻ–াāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻ‰āĻšিā§Ž āĻ¨ā§Ÿ।
āĻ•ী āĻ–াāĻŦেāĻ¨?


āĻ–াāĻŦাāĻ°েāĻ° āĻĨাāĻ˛াāĻ° ā§Ēā§Ļ āĻ­াāĻ— āĻŦিāĻ­িāĻ¨্āĻ¨ āĻļাāĻ• āĻ¸āĻŦ্āĻœি āĻāĻŦং ā§§ā§Ļ āĻ­াāĻ— āĻŦিāĻ­িāĻ¨্āĻ¨ āĻ°āĻ™েāĻ° āĻĢāĻ˛ āĻĨাāĻ•āĻŦে। āĻŦাāĻ•ী āĻ…āĻ°্āĻ§েāĻ•েāĻ° āĻ…āĻ°্āĻ§েāĻ• āĻļ্āĻŦেāĻ¤āĻ¸াāĻ° āĻĻাāĻ¨া āĻļāĻ¸্āĻ¯ āĻ¯েāĻŽāĻ¨ āĻšাāĻ˛, āĻ—āĻŽ āĻ‡āĻ¤্āĻ¯াāĻĻি āĻ“ āĻ•āĻ¨্āĻĻ (āĻ†āĻ˛ু) āĻœাāĻ¤ীā§Ÿ āĻ–াāĻĻ্āĻ¯ āĻĨাāĻ•āĻŦে। āĻŦাāĻ•ী āĻ…āĻ°্āĻ§েāĻ• āĻĒ্āĻ°āĻŸিāĻ¨ āĻœাāĻ¤ীā§Ÿ āĻ–াāĻĻ্āĻ¯ āĻ¯েāĻŽāĻ¨ āĻ­িāĻ­িāĻ¨্āĻ¨ āĻŽাāĻ›, āĻŽাংāĻ¸, āĻŦিāĻ­িāĻ¨্āĻ¨ āĻŦিāĻ¨্āĻ¸ āĻ“ āĻĄাāĻ˛ āĻĨাāĻ•āĻŦে। 


āĻ†āĻĒāĻ¨াāĻ° āĻĒ্āĻ°āĻ¤িāĻŸি āĻ–াāĻŦাāĻ° āĻĒ্āĻ˛েāĻŸ, āĻĒ্āĻ°াāĻ¤āĻ°াāĻļ, āĻŽāĻ§্āĻ¯াāĻš্āĻ¨ āĻ­োāĻœāĻ¨, āĻŸিāĻĢিāĻ¨ āĻŦা āĻ¨ৈāĻļ āĻ­োāĻœāĻ¨ āĻ¸āĻŦ āĻ•্āĻˇেāĻ¤্āĻ°েāĻ‡ āĻ“āĻĒāĻ°েāĻ°  āĻ…āĻ¨ুāĻĒাāĻ¤ে āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻ‰āĻšিā§Ž। āĻāĻ‡āĻŸি āĻ¸াāĻ§াāĻ°āĻ¨ āĻ–াāĻĻ্āĻ¯ āĻ¤াāĻ˛িāĻ•া, āĻŦাā§œিāĻ° āĻĒ্āĻ°āĻ¤িāĻŸি āĻ¸āĻĻāĻ¸্āĻ¯ āĻ¸āĻ িāĻ• āĻ­াāĻŦে āĻ¤া āĻ—্āĻ°āĻšāĻŖ āĻ•āĻ°āĻ›েāĻ¨ āĻ¤া āĻ˛āĻ•্āĻˇ্āĻ¯ āĻ°াāĻ–ুāĻ¨।


Telegu :

ā°Žā°¨ ā°ļā°°ీā°° ā°Ŧā°°ుā°ĩు ā°Ēెā°°ā°—ā°•ుంā°Ąా ā°Žā°°ిā°¯ు ā°Žā°¨ ā°Ēొā°Ÿ్ā°Ÿ ā°Ēొā°Ąā°ĩు 80 ā°¸ెం.ā°Žీ ā°•ంā°Ÿే ā°¤ā°•్ā°•ుā°ĩā°—ా ā°‰ంā°Ąేā°˛ా ā°Žā°¨ ā°†ā°šాā°°ం ā°‰ంā°Ąాā°˛ి. ā°ā°Žి ā°¤ిā°¨ā°•ూā°Ąā°Ļు? ā°šā°•్ā°•ెā°° ā°Žā°°ిā°¯ు ā°Ēింā°Ąిā°¤ో ā°•ూā°Ąిā°¨ ā°†ā°šాā°°ం ā°Ēూā°°్ā°¤ిā°—ా ā°¨ిā°˛ిā°Ēిā°ĩేā°¯ā°Ŧā°Ąింā°Ļి. ā°Ŧిā°¸్ā°•ెā°Ÿ్ā°˛ు ā°Žā°°ిā°¯ు ā°Ŧ్ā°°ెā°Ą్ ā°Ēింā°Ąిā°¤ో ā°¤ā°¯ాā°°ు ā°šేā°¸్ā°¤ాā°°ు, ā°•ాā°Ŧā°Ÿ్ā°Ÿి ā°Ŧిā°¸్ā°•ెā°Ÿ్ā°˛ు ā°Žā°°ిā°¯ు ā°Ŧ్ā°°ెā°Ą్ ā°¤ిā°¨ā°Ąం ā°Žాā°¨ేā°¯ంā°Ąి. ā°¨ెā°˛ā°•ు 500 ā°—్ā°°ాā°Žుā°˛ ā°•ంā°Ÿే ā°Žā°•్ā°•ుā°ĩ ā°¨ూā°¨ె ā°ĩిā°¨ిā°¯ోā°—ింā°šā°°ాā°Ļు. ā°ā°Žి ā°¤ిā°¨ాā°˛ి ā°Ģుā°Ą్ ā°Ē్ā°˛ేā°Ÿ్‌ā°˛ో 40% ā°ĩిā°ĩిā°§ ā°†ā°•ుā°Ēā°š్ā°š ā°•ూā°°ā°—ాā°¯ā°˛ు ā°Žā°°ిā°¯ు 10% ā°ĩిā°ĩిā°§ ā°°ంā°—ుā°˛ ā°Ēంā°Ą్ā°˛ు. ā°Žిā°—ిā°˛ిā°¨ ā°¸ā°—ంā°˛ో ā°Ŧిā°¯్ā°¯ం, ā°—ోā°§ుā°Žā°˛ు ā°Žొā°Ļā°˛ైā°¨ ā°¤ెā°˛్ā°˛ā°Ÿి ā°—ింā°œā°˛ు ā°Žā°°ిā°¯ు ā°Ļుంā°Ēā°˛ు (ā°Ŧంā°—ాā°ŗā°Ļుంā°Ēā°˛ు) ā°‰ంā°Ÿాā°¯ి.

Mana śarÄĢra baruvu peragakuṇḍā mariyu mana poáš­áš­a poḍavu 80 seᚁ.MÄĢ kaṇṭē takkuvagā uṇḍēlā mana āhāraᚁ uṇḍāli. Ēmi tinakÅĢḍadu? Cakkera mariyu piṇḍitō kÅĢḍina āhāraᚁ pÅĢrtigā nilipivēyabaḍindi. Biskeáš­lu mariyu breḍ piṇḍitō tayāru cēstāru, kābaáš­áš­i biskeáš­lu mariyu breḍ tinaḍaᚁ mānēyaṇḍi. Nelaku 500 grāmula kaṇṭē ekkuva nÅĢne viniyōgin̄carādu. Ēmi tināli phuḍ plēṭ‌lō 40% vividha ākupacca kÅĢragāyalu mariyu 10% vividha raṅgula paṇḍlu. Migilina saganlō biyyaᚁ, gōdhumalu modalaina tellaáš­i gin̄jalu mariyu dumpalu (baṅgāḡadumpalu) uṇṭāyi.