Saturday, December 20, 2025

2026 offline brick and mortar academic dayjob workflow

 [20/12, 16:17] Microsoft Copilot: Thanks for sharing the academic calendar for 2026. Here's a concise summary of the scheduled academic activities:


*πŸ—“️ Monthly Academic Sessions Overview – 2026*

*CME (Continuing Medical Education):*
- Jan: General Medicine
- Feb: Radiology Diagnosis
- Mar: Psychiatry
- Apr: DVL (Dermatology, Venereology & Leprosy)
- May: Emergency Medicine Department (EMD)
- Jun: Paediatrics
- Jul: Obstetrics & Gynaecology (OBG)
- Aug: Medical Education Unit (MEU)
- Sep: Orthopaedics
- Oct: Microbiology
- Nov: Psychiatry
- Dec: Forensic Medicine

*Guest Lectures:*
- Jan: Ophthalmology
- Feb: Anesthesiology
- Mar: Anatomy
- Apr: Psychiatry
- May: Pharmacology
- Jun: Pathology
- Jul: Radiology Diagnosis
- Aug: Urology
- Sep: General Medicine
- Oct: Social & Preventive Medicine (SPM)
- Nov: ENT
- Dec: MEU

*Integrated Teaching Topics:*

- Mar: Point of Care Tests
- Apr: Road Traffic Accident Management
- May: Epidural Anesthesia & Analgesia
- Jun: Emerging Respiratory Viruses
- Jul: Prescription Monitoring & Auditing
- Aug: Adverse Drug Reactions
- Oct: Anaemia
- Nov: Outpatient Antimicrobial Therapy (OPAT)
- Dec: Ethics & Professional Conduct

Let me know if you'd like this formatted into a printable schedule, calendar view, or if you need reminders or summaries for any specific month or topic!

[20/12, 16:18]: Calendar view


[20/12, 16:18] Microsoft Copilot: Hmm, I don't understand this kind of message. Try again in plain text, or let's find a new topic.

[20/12, 16:19] Microsoft Copilot: Thanks for sharing the Clinical Meeting schedule for 2026. Here's a structured summary for easy reference:

---

*πŸ₯ Clinical Meeting Schedule (Thursdays, 9:00–10:00 AM)*

*πŸ“… January – June 2026*
- *Jan 01*: Pulmonary Medicine
- *Jan 08*: General Medicine
- *Jan 15*: _Sankranti / Pongal_ (Holiday)
- *Jan 22*: Obstetrics & Gynaecology
- *Jan 29*: Paediatrics
- *Feb 05*: Orthopaedics
- *Feb 12*: ENT
- *Feb 19*: Forensic Medicine
- *Feb 26*: Ophthalmology
- *Mar 05*: Anaesthesiology
- *Mar 12*: DVL
- *Mar 19*: _Ugadi_ (Holiday)
- *Mar 26*: Psychiatry
- *Apr 02*: Obstetrics & Gynaecology
- *Apr 09*: Forensic Medicine
- *Apr 16*: Emergency Medicine
- *Apr 23*: Hospital Administration
- *Apr 30*: Urology
- *May 07*: General Medicine
- *May 14*: General Surgery
- *May 21*: Obstetrics & Gynaecology
- *May 28*: Paediatrics
- *Jun 04*: Orthopaedics
- *Jun 11*: ENT
- *Jun 18*: Community Medicine
- *Jun 25*: Ophthalmology

*πŸ“… July – December 2026*
- *Jul 02*: Community Medicine
- *Jul 09*: Anaesthesiology
- *Jul 23*: Radio Diagnosis
- *Jul 30*: Psychiatry
- *Aug 06*: Pulmonary Medicine
- *Aug 13*: Transfusion Medicine
- *Aug 20*: Emergency Medicine
- *Aug 27*: Hospital Administration
- *Sep 03*: DVL
- *Sep 10*: General Medicine
- *Sep 17*: General Surgery
- *Sep 24*: Obstetrics & Gynaecology
- *Oct 01*: Paediatrics
- *Oct 08*: Orthopaedics
- *Oct 15*: ENT
- *Oct 22*: Ophthalmology
- *Oct 29*: Community Medicine
- *Nov 05*: Anaesthesiology
- *Nov 12*: DVL
- *Nov 19*: Radio Diagnosis
- *Nov 26*: Psychiatry
- *Dec 03*: Pulmonary Medicine
- *Dec 10*: Urology
- *Dec 17*: Emergency Medicine
- *Dec 24*: Hospital Administration

---

Departments are reminded to submit their case/topic by the preceding Thursday and are encouraged to involve relevant pre-clinical, para-clinical, and diagnostic departments for integrated discussions.

Would you like this turned into a calendar format or a printable handout?




Tuesday, December 16, 2025

CBME led curricular change driven by real patient centred team based learning outcomes that can correlate with patient illness improvement outcomes

 Summary:



The conversation revolves around the need for curricular change in medical education, focusing on real patient-centered team-based learning that correlates learning outcomes with patient illness improvement outcomes. Participants discuss the importance of shifting from traditional teaching methods to more interactive and patient-focused approaches, leveraging AI-driven tools and global team-based learning platforms.

*Key Words:*

- Medical education
- Curricular change
- Patient-centered learning
- Team-based learning
- AI-driven learning
- Competency-based medical education (CBME)
- Entrustable professional activities (EPAs)





Conversational transcripts:


16/12, 16:35]hu2: In reply to the first comment to this post:

Personalized medicine is for answering individual patient requirements! There's no personalized medicine for physicians who have to heal others.

Personalized curriculum can't apply to training physicians who have to understand and handle every human problem even as a specialist. However the nudge to curricular policy makers to use medical education as a tool to drive systems thinking holds good here.

NEJM competence based medical education CBME review journal club:



### Strengths of the Article

The NEJM review by Cooper and Holmboe effectively synthesizes evidence for CBME, highlighting its outcomes-based approach as superior to time-based models, supported by studies like the Canadian family medicine cohort showing reduced trainee deficiencies through early feedback. It emphasizes practical implementation via milestones, EPAs, and coproduction, aligning with global standards (e.g., ACGME, WHO reforms), and addresses equity in training to meet societal health needs. The call for innovation, such as time-variable models like Competence by Design, is forward-thinking and grounded in educational science.

### Limitations and Critiques

While advocating strongly for CBME, the article underplays implementation barriers, such as high resource demands for faculty development and data analytics, which could strain underfunded programs, especially in low-resource settings. It relies on early evidence (e.g., cohort studies) without discussing long-term outcomes or potential biases in self-reported assessments, and the focus on U.S./Canadian contexts limits generalizability to diverse global systems. Additionally, the moral imperative framing risks oversimplifying resistance as "flawed logic," ignoring valid concerns about workload and burnout for clinician-educators.

### Overall Assessment
This piece is a compelling, evidence-informed push for paradigm change in medical education, essential reading for leaders, but it would benefit from more balanced discussion of scalability and empirical gaps to guide realistic adoption.

More human journal club on the nejm CBME piece here: https://www.facebook.com/share/p/16ZnYt7W3v/?mibextid=oFDknk

Here's a detailed summary of the key insights from the article “Competency-Based Medical Education at the Front Lines of Patient Care” by Dawn Cooper and Eric S. Holmboe, published in The New England Journal of Medicine:

---

*🩺 Summary: Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME)*

*🎯 Why CBME?*
- The traditional time-based model of medical education is failing to consistently produce physicians who are fully prepared for clinical practice.
- Many graduates lack essential clinical, procedural, and teamwork skills, contributing to gaps in care and health inequities.
- CBME is proposed as a solution to align medical training with the quintuple aim: better population health, health equity, patient care, provider well-being, and cost reduction.

*πŸ”„ Key Differences: Traditional vs. CBME*
- *Traditional Model*: Fixed duration, limited assessments, time as a proxy for competence.
- *CBME Model*: Flexible duration, frequent assessments, time as a resource for achieving competence.
- CBME emphasizes outcomes, direct observation, and readiness for unsupervised practice rather than time served.

*🧠 Core Components of CBME*
- *Competency Frameworks*: Define clear, assessable milestones across domains like clinical reasoning, communication, professionalism, and systems-based practice.
- *Programmatic Assessment*: Continuous, multifaceted evaluations (e.g., direct observation, multisource feedback) to track progress and guide learning.
- *Coproduction*: Trainees are active partners in their education, collaborating with faculty to shape learning and care delivery.

*πŸ‘©‍🏫 Roles in CBME*

*1. Program Leaders*
- Design and implement competency frameworks and curricula.
- Ensure alignment with societal health needs and institutional goals.
- Use learning analytics and aggregated data to monitor and improve programs.

*2. Clinician-Educators*
- Deliver high-quality care while teaching and assessing trainees.
- Provide real-time feedback and coaching.
- Use milestones to tailor learning plans and identify gaps.

*3. Trainees*
- Engage as co-creators of their learning journey.
- Provide feedback to improve curricula and assessments.
- Progress based on demonstrated competence, not time.

*πŸ“Š Evidence of Effectiveness*
- Studies show CBME improves early identification of struggling learners and supports remediation.
- Canadian family medicine programs using CBME saw fewer residents flagged for deficiencies and better remediation outcomes.

*πŸ”„ Continuous Improvement*
- CBME programs require ongoing evaluation and adaptation.
- Learning analytics and AI tools are being explored to enhance assessment and curriculum design.

---

[16/12, 14:36]hu3: Recording of

*CME on Curriculum mapping vs Knowledge harvesting: Bridging the gap*


Conducted by MGMCRI, SBV

on

29.11.2025



[16/12, 16:18]hu2: πŸ‘†Can someone produce an infographic on this YouTube video?

Here's the perplexity summary of the above video:

### Event Overview

This 2-hour-57-minute YouTube video records a Continuing Medical Education (CME) session hosted by Sri Balaji Vidyapeeth Deemed University on December 9, 2025, titled "Curriculum Mapping vs Knowledge Harvesting: Bridging the Gap." It features expert discussions on enhancing medical education through structured curriculum design, emphasizing alignment between planned learning outcomes and actual student knowledge acquisition. The session targets educators and administrators, drawing from competency-based frameworks like those in India's National Medical Commission guidelines.

### Curriculum Mapping Explained
Curriculum mapping involves creating visual or tabular representations of course elements—such as objectives, content, teaching methods, and assessments—to identify gaps, redundancies, and alignments across programs. Speakers highlight its role in ensuring horizontal (within-year) and vertical (across years) coherence, using tools like Bloom's Taxonomy to progress from basic recall to advanced analysis in medical training. Benefits include data-driven improvements, accreditation compliance (e.g., NABH standards), and adapting to 21st-century skills like critical thinking for future doctors.

### Knowledge Harvesting and Bridging the Gap

Knowledge harvesting refers to systematically capturing and applying tacit student and faculty insights post-teaching, contrasting with static mapping by focusing on real-time feedback loops to refine curricula. The video contrasts the two: mapping plans the "intended" curriculum, while harvesting evaluates the "enacted" and "learned" versions, addressing discrepancies like omitted lectures or mismatched assessments.

Recommendations include integrating digital tools for ongoing mapping and harvesting to boost learner engagement and outcomes in medical schools.

### Key Takeaways

Participants learn practical strategies, such as using software for dynamic maps and case studies from Sri Balaji's programs, to bridge gaps and foster integrated learning. The session stresses that effective bridging reduces educational silos, improves student proficiency, and aligns with global standards like WHO's medical education reforms. For full details, view the video or university's CME archives.


[16/12, 16:29]hu8: Use NotebookLM to create a nice infographic about this video, Sir.
Then, please kindly share with us the infographic you obtained.



[16/12, 16:32]hu2: The notebook LM on my phone doesn't work any longer. Not sure why because in the initial phases it used to work like a dream.



[16/12, 16:42]hu8: Now it is part of Gemini 3



[16/12, 16:42]hu8: So try using it through Gemini 3 and I am sure it will give you a very nice infographic.



[16/12, 16:43]hu9: Generating a Cornell notes would be more appropriate than an infographic for such a lengthy video. So sharing my Cornell notes for easy run-through.



[16/12, 16:46]hu10: You can try MidJourney or Nano Banana, but you need a summarized script for the video.






[16/12, 17:05]hu2: πŸ‘† notebook LM or gemini 3 or deepseek?

Amazing how this video and perhaps many others that would otherwise languish in unclicked TLDS cognitive locks have suddenly been liberated with an at a glance infographic summary!



[16/12, 17:13]hu11: AI is becoming a kind of “instant lens” for information. Instead of spending hours distilling a long video, article, or dataset, AI can now scan the content, identify the core insights, and render them into a clear infographic in under a minute.



[16/12, 23:52]hu3: How much is the retention of AI Generated and learnt things vs traditionaly learnt things. 

Simile

Old songs produced on traditional instrument 

Vs

New songs made on one synthesizer. 

Old song are still remembered. 

New come and go.



[17/12, 00:05]hu8: How do you define an 'old song' vs a 'new song'?πŸ€”


[17/12, 00:21]hu11: AI is an incredible tool for generation and pattern-finding, but it does not yet "learn" and "retain" in the human sense. It simulates the output of learning without the foundational process that makes knowledge sticky, meaningful, and durable for a biological mind


[17/12, 06:35]hu3: Born in 1980

Old Before you were born, mostly 1950 to 1980

Contemporary 1980 to 2000

New 2000 onwards

Recent 2020 to 2025

Just a wild division



[17/12, 06:39]hu3: Indian system depends on feeding 100%,

The retention depending on capacity can be anything from 100% rarely to 0%

AI summary according to maybe 20% of original text, 

So if new generation is trained to read only AI Summary of PDF 

They are fed on 20%,
So retention will be from 20% to 0
That also not the details, 
Only the summary, 
So human brain is not getting the full data to analyse, 
But AI analysed data to train. 

And

AI might not include the important things of PDF or Video depending on the maker and maintainer. 

Good Day
Happy Learning.



[17/12, 06:42]hu3: The dependence on AI is due time constraint of today's world. 
24 hours have become less in today's world. 

Have not read full pdf for long time. 
1 to 2 pages you can think of reading. 
3 to 5 depends on topic. 
6 to 10 you think start or no. 
More than 10 is hesitancy.



[17/12, 07:59]hu2: Every page depends on our interest in the topic!

If one is really interested in the topic 10 pages would appear too less and one could be thirsting for more.

One easy example of this is god forbid someone in our family starts suffering from a clinically complex chronic illness that at the same time has an urgency of becoming acute on chronic and we as well as our doctors could be having to deal with layers of medical uncertainty as the illness journey unfolds.

Hence when we start searching and reading more and more on the illness topic and continue till we find resolution regardless of how many pages it requires.

The healthcare curriculum hasn't been designed in that manner for health professional learning around real cases but as @⁨hu11 knows even in real patient centred team based learning we do get stimulated in a similar manner and sometimes no amount of text appears TLDR as long as it remains contextual to the patient's requirements


[17/12, 08:13]hu2: Current traditional drivers need to change for CBME to take root.

Current drivers for CBME are student learning outcomes while it completely ignores any correlation between our learning outcomes and real patient illness outcomes. This needs to be addressed through real patient centred team based learning approaches to competence development


[17/12, 08:33]hu3: Agree to some extent. 

My first Chat GPT Search was in 2023

And

Topic was Ca Oesophagus. 

And

As you said someone in family had it

And

I was not aware much about it, 

Types, Treatment and Prognosis. 

But was not happy with the result as they were too generic,

So had to resort to traditional google search for articles. 

NB

I was not trained in prompt engineering, 
Even after training I am not a regular user

And

It has gone into disuse atrophy like many other things In learnt and could not implement.

[17/12, 08:39]hu2: My take was around PDF volume driven learning barriers as in overcoming inertia due to FOCO (fear of cognitive overload).

PDFs may not always be an outcome of AI driven searches.

AI has it's own set of challenges still evolving everyday as human cognition dances to keep pace


[16/12, 22:53]hu4: Is it old wine 🍷 in bottle 🍾

[16/12, 22:54]hu4: Some paradigm shift

[16/12, 22:54]hu4: Is going to happen


[16/12, 22:57]hu3: Every change takes time, 
CBME came in 2019,
Still many things going on in Traditional way, 
For a change to happen, 
Half the dept should change.


[16/12, 22:58]hu4: Giving Sanskrit / Hindi 
Names  may give some perception about new change 

Functional and implementation should be changed 


Corruption should also be stopped



[17/12, 08:12) hu2: Current traditional drivers need to change for CBME to take root.

Current drivers for CBME are student learning outcomes while it completely ignores any correlation between our learning outcomes and real patient illness outcomes. This needs to be addressed through real patient centred team based learning approaches to competence development


[17/12, 08:19]hu5: EPAs entrustable professional activities


[17/12, 08:22]hu6: At level of internship with proper supervision


[17/12, 08:25]hu5: During clerkship


[17/12, 08:28]hu6: Possible


[17/12, 08:29]hu3: Theoretically there is enough framework,
Practically it is the problem,
Software as well Hardware and Humanware is the biggest problem.


[17/12, 08:30]hu6: It is true. It requires critical mass of faculties who are passionate about teaching-learning- training for EPAs to start working


[17/12, 08:36]hu6: Perhaps it's time to shake off our inhibitions and reasons 'for not performing' --- change in performance and implementation


[17/12, 08:46]hu2: We have first year MBBS students from various colleges in our professional real patient centered team based learning platforms 24x7.

One of them presented a case in one of our CMEs just 3 months into MBBS.

There is a lot of hidden curriculum in medicine that is in itself a joy to expose both at an individual personal as well as a team based global level.



[17/12, 08:53]hu7: Good morning sir 
Will it possible to share more details of intervention


[17/12, 08:55]hu2: Sure


[17/12, 08:56]hu2: Have already shared in the group from time to time but will customise it again specially for you


[17/12, 08:56]hu7: Okey sir


[17/12, 09:17]hu2: We have been regularly engaging in real patient centred, global team based learning since two decades and it has currently grown by leaps and bounds especially after the advent of AI


[17/12, 09:18]hu2: We summarised our overall learnings in general recently here:


Let me know if you need to have the full text PDF.


[17/12, 09:20]hu2: This is a more focused description of our AI driven real patient centered team based learning published last week πŸ‘‡



[17/12, 09:21]hu2: Off course the only way you can actually understand it is to participate in our regular team based learning sessions where we can add you. Every patient is a separate project and has a separate WhatsApp team based learning discussion group as described here: 



[17/12, 09:23]hu2: This write up again published this year was written by the same student who presented a case in our CME just 3 months into his MBBS course πŸ‘‡



[17/12, 09:28]hu7: Thank u very much sir 
Regards

[17/12, 09:29]hu7: Yes sir.
We had discussed before I think 7-8 years


[17/12, 09:35]hu2: Yes you may remember this one πŸ‘‡




*Thematic Analysis:*

1. *Need for Curricular Change:* The conversation highlights the need for medical education to move away from traditional teaching methods and focus on patient-centered, team-based learning approaches.

2. *Role of AI:* AI-driven tools are seen as a means to enhance learning, provide instant summaries, and facilitate global team-based learning.

3. *Importance of Context:* Participants emphasize the importance of contextual learning, where students learn from real patients and cases, rather than just theoretical concepts.

4. *Challenges in Implementation:* The conversation touches on the challenges of implementing CBME and EPAs, including the need for faculty training, infrastructure, and a critical mass of passionate educators.

5. *Global Collaboration:* The discussion highlights the benefits of global collaboration and team-based learning, leveraging platforms like WhatsApp and online forums to facilitate learning and knowledge sharing.


[17/12, 11:11]hu8: I really wonder what is the agenda behind this massive push for CBME. If you read the comments in the FB page, even in their own country people are quite confused. After all a curriculum is a guidance for designing learning experiences for students. Why should one way of looking at how it can be done be projected as 'best'? The authors themselves, as were all of us in this group, have received their training in what they have labelled as 'traditional'. Are they implying that we are ALL deficient as practitioners?? This hype about one framework has to be toned down. Let us get on with what we have been doing pretty well for so many decades. It is in OUR hands - we should, as teachers, and primarily responsible for shaping the healthcare workforce of the future, take over the design and implementation of the curriculum. A curriculum that includes educational experiences that match our way of thinking, doing and being.



[18/12, 10:05) hu 9 : With great pleasure, the Association of ...welcomes you to be part of the Theory and Practice of technology enhanced Competency Based Medical Education workshop. The sessions cover all aspects to enable faculty to implement CBME successfully, guided by well renowned and experienced resource persons. This physical workshop provides an excellent opportunity to all the medical educators to equip themselves with the use of innovative technology in implementation of CBME.
  
*Objectives* *of the workshop* :   
 
By the end of this 5-day face-to-face workshop, participants will be able to:


Understand the foundational concepts of Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME)



Apply principles of Workplace-Based Assessment (WPBA) to evaluate higher-order thinking skills (HOTS) 


Integrate technology-enhanced digital tools such as LMS, FACE GT and E-Portfolios to support learning and assessment.


Develop strategies to address the affective domain and AETCOM competencies 



Design personalized learning pathways and utilize tools like Exit OSCE and radar graphs for formative and summative assessments.


Employ standardized patients and simulation-based learning technologies to enhance clinical training.



[18/12, 10:21]hu2: Addressing the last point made in the flyer around employing standardized patients and simulation based learning technology to enhance clinical training in CBME:

In the real world of real patients, medical uncertainty from clinical complexity can pose a formidable challenge in the form of epistemic uncertainty, which concerns gaps in knowledge that could, in principle, be filled through additional information or improved methods but then there's also hermeneutic uncertainty lurking, which in contrast, concerns the inherently open and contestable nature of interpretation itself: the fact that the same situation can be legitimately interpreted in multiple ways. Within this hermeneutic domain, ethical uncertainty—the uncertainty that stems from the inherently dynamic and unfinished nature of human values themselves, rather than from limitations in our knowledge or reasoning capabilities—occupies a crucial position. 

The ability to engage with and remain open to ethical uncertainty is an inherent component of professional expertise across domains like healthcare and real patient centred team based learning could be an effective approach to accommodate both 

https://academic.oup.com/rssdat/article/1/1/udaf002/8317136



[18/12, 16:28]huai: Based on the transcripts, the meu CBME Journal Club was a virtual professional discussion focused on the need to fundamentally redesign medical education.

Unlike a structured course, it was an informal dialogue among educators debating how to connect student learning to real patient outcomes.

The discussion centered on three main themes, which I've summarized in the table below.

| **Thematic Cluster** | **Core Idea from the Discussion** | **Key Questions & Debates Raised** |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **πŸ“ˆ The "Why": Need for Change** | The traditional, time-based model is failing to reliably produce competent physicians ready for modern healthcare demands. | Is this a real paradigm shift or "old wine in a new bottle"? How do we move from theory to practical, widespread implementation? |
| **🎯 The Goal: Linking Learning to Patient Outcomes** | The primary driver for curricular change should be **improved patient care**, not just internal educational metrics. | How can we directly correlate student learning outcomes with real patient illness improvement? |
| **πŸ› ️ The "How": Tools & Implementation** | **Team-based learning (TBL)** around real patient cases and **AI-driven tools** are seen as key methods to achieve patient-centered CBME. | What are the practical, human, and technological barriers to implementing Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs) and using AI effectively? |

### πŸ” How the Discussion Aligns with Broader CBME Practice
The journal club's themes are central to the ongoing global shift toward CBME. Here is how they connect to established principles and challenges:

*   **Foundational CBME Principles**: The core idea—that training should start by defining the competencies needed for patient care and then building the curriculum backward from there—is a central tenet of CBME. This represents a fundamental shift from a time-based, process-oriented system to an **outcomes-based, learner-centered model**.
*   **Recognized Implementation Challenges**: Participants correctly identified major hurdles. Implementing CBME and new tools like EPAs requires a **critical mass of trained faculty** and significant institutional support. Similarly, integrating AI faces barriers like a **lack of faculty training, ethical concerns about bias, and unclear implementation strategies**.
*   **The Role of AI as an Enhancer**: The discussion's view of AI as a tool to distill information and enable new learning formats aligns with current research. AI is seen not as a replacement for educators, but as a **"digital co-tutor"** that can power virtual patients, provide personalized feedback, and facilitate team-based learning in virtual spaces.

### πŸ’‘ What the Discussion Didn't Cover
While the conversation touched on high-level themes, here are some practical aspects of CBME and AI integration that are part of current best practices:

*   **Specific CBME Teaching Methods**: Beyond general TBL, established interactive techniques are used in clinical settings, such as the **"One-Minute Preceptor"** model for case discussion and the **DOAP (Demonstration-Observation-Assistance-Performance)** framework for procedural skills.
*   **Structured AI Integration**: Leading institutions are moving beyond ad-hoc AI use. This involves **formal needs assessments** with both faculty and students, followed by **targeted training workshops** to build literacy and address ethical concerns proactively.
*   **The Importance of Programmatic Assessment**: A key technical aspect of CBME is moving away from single high-stakes exams. It relies on **continuous programmatic assessment**—collecting numerous low-stakes observations in the workplace—to form a complete picture of a learner's competence.

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Book Chapter "Trends in Continuing Education and Lived Learning Experiences in Individual Physicians: Notes from a Small-Scale Hemodialysis Unit Catering to a Large Population in Central India,"

 


The image displays the title page and abstract for a chapter in the book Recent Trends in Life Long Education. The chapter, titled "Trends in Continuing Education and Lived Learning Experiences in Individual Physicians: Notes from a Small-Scale Hemodialysis Unit Catering to a Large Population in Central India," details a study on a hemodialysis unit in India. 
  • Aim: Study the functioning of a small-scale hemodialysis unit and its effect on patients' lives.
  • Methodology: Ethnographic attention to process and outcomes, using subjective and objective data from hospital records and individual observations.
  • Findings: The dialysis system, despite running below standard guidelines, achieved comparable levels of efficacy, maintained residual renal function and quality of life, if not prolonged average survival.
  • Conclusion: More accounts from similar centers are needed to document how technology is used effectively despite financial constraints.





The introduction provides an overview of the use of artificial kidneys (dialysis) for patients with end-stage kidney disease, noting the procedure's importance and limitations. It highlights that while dialysis prevents death, patient survival rates are significantly lower than the general population. The author shares a personal account of setting up a small dialysis unit in Nepal after observing existing units in India. 
  • Artificial kidneys function based on diffusion and osmosis to filter waste products from the blood. 
  • Survival rates for dialysis patients (e.g., 7-10 years for ages 40-44) are much worse than the general population (30-40 years for the same age group). 
  • Inadequate dialysis is a major contributor to lower survival, suggesting more intensive treatment may be beneficial. 
  • The case study of Kasturba hospital in Bhopal shows a significant increase (32-fold) in dialysis sessions over five years. 
text discusses a study on the adequacy of dialysis, survival rates, and quality of life for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) at a hospital in Bhopal, India. The study found that a substantial percentage of patients were receiving inadequate dialysis treatments and that most patients had a short life expectancy. 
  • Dialysis Adequacy: A significant percentage of patients (19.5% unacceptable, 56.5% inadequate) received dialysis below acceptable limits, defined by K/DOQI and European guidelines as a delivered single-pool urea Kt/V of 1.2 and 1.4, respectively. 
  • Survival: Most patients were in the 50-70 age group, and the majority survived for less than 6 months, with few exceptions surviving 3-5 years. 
  • Quality of Life: The study attempted to assess quality of life through individual patient narratives, recognizing the importance of understanding the impact of healthcare interventions beyond just physical outcomes.
  • Discussion: The author conducted the study to determine the meaning of their efforts in a small-scale hemodialysis setup they planned to open at another institution.
The text discusses the challenges and realities of providing dialysis treatment in resource-limited settings, focusing on the perspectives of both caregivers and patients. It highlights the differences between care provided under financial constraints and the ideal guidelines advocated by developed nations. 
Key points:
  • Mortality was high and treatment efficacy often inadequate due to resource limitations, leading to compromised care compared to developed world guidelines.
  • Caregivers balanced ideal active management with available resources, resulting in practices like once-weekly or even once-in-two-weeks dialysis sessions due to machine constraints.
  • Patients had varied experiences; some adapted well, continuing daily activities and even singing during sessions, while others struggled with the adjustment and became bedridden.
  • The conclusion suggests that even with suboptimal frequency below DOQI guidelines, the system generated comparable efficacy, maintained residual renal function and quality of life, if not prolonged average survival.
The text provides several narratives about patients undergoing dialysis at Kasturba Hospital (Kh), Bhopal, highlighting their personal experiences, medical histories, and the challenges they faced with kidney disease and treatment.
  • Narrative 1 details a 48-year-old woman's 2-year journey with maintenance hemodialysis, including her initial denial, use of herbal medicines, and the potential link her husband wonders about to the 1984 Bhopal gas tragedy.
  • Narrative 2 describes a 65-year-old retired toolmaker with hypertension who has adapted well to dialysis, continuing daily walks and cycling.
  • Narrative 3 focuses on a 44-year-old homemaker with a history of renal stones and hypertension, now completely dependent on three weekly dialysis sessions.
  • Narrative 4 covers a 60-year-old retired gentleman who is doing well on dialysis, with reduced symptoms of hiccups and fatigue after starting treatment.
  • Narrative 6 describes a 57-year-old retired clerk with cystic kidney disease on hemodialysis for almost 4 years, who is remarkably resilient and often defers his sessions for others. 
  • Narrative 7 tells of a 42-year-old homemaker with polycystic kidney disease who remained well on dialysis for two years and would sing bhajans during her sessions until her sudden death from a ruptured cyst. 
  • The Acknowledgments section thanks healthcare givers, administrators, and physician colleagues for their help with data collection and manuscript review.
  • The References list three sources related to end-stage renal disease and methods for calculating hemodialysis dosage. 

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Medicine department publications 2025-2018

 Readings and citations:







Publications of 2025

Publications by our UG network began with a journal club archived here: https://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2025/03/indian-mbbs-students-sig-journal-club.html?m=1
that was later written up as a letter to editor here: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40287356/

Work on our second publication began in December 2024 last year right after our presentation at university of Hyderabad here: https://medicinedepartment.blogspot.com/2024/11/technology-end-user-driven-ecosystem.html?m=1https://youtu.be/goPplnFafFI?feature=shared, followed by plans to write it up for the pubmed indexed journal of participatory medicine following which we received three participatory action research reflectivity samples archived here:https://pajrcasereporter.blogspot.com/2025/12/participatory-medicine-projr.html?m=1 and while those directly didn't become a formal paper our PaJR network students did eventually write up book chapters on participatory medicine using original material from our University of Hyderabad conference presentation in a book released as a part of the same conference proceedings full text accessible here: https://www.atlantis-press.com/proceedings/ilth-24/126014113https://www.atlantis-press.com/proceedings/ilth-24/126014110.
A month later in August 2025, Narketpally syndrome as another name for PaJR elements flowing together in a regular workflow was released here: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40674544/ 
On the same month we submitted an article to the journal of participatory medicine around another patient of clinical complexity and not the original 82 year old patient presented in the UoH conference that originally inspired us to think of preparing his report for the same journal! It was accepted for publication a month later in September 2025 as archived here:https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/81950/accepted
Current work is focused on an invited paper for the journal "Medicines" and another one that expands the Narketpally syndrome workflow into medical litigation and liturgy that are re-examined using an etymology lens which also went heavily into making the Narketpally paper.

2024:

Irfan, M., Suryadevara, N.K., Biswas, R., Gaddam, A. (2025). Kinematic Gait Analysis Using Markerless System to Determine Joint Angles. In: Fortino, G., Kumar, A., Swaroop, A., Shukla, P. (eds) Proceedings of Third International Conference on Computing and Communication Networks. ICCCN 2023. Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems, vol 977. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-97-2671-4_42


2023:

1) Samitinjay A, Vaishnavi K, Gongireddy R, Kulakarni SC, Panuganti R, Vishwanatham C, Manikanta AK, Biswas R. Understanding clinical complexity in organ and organizational systems: Challenges local and global. J Eval Clin Pract. 2023 Jun 19 doi: 10.1111/jep.13886.PMID: 37335625.
Summary : Complexities exist clinically in making a diagnosis, and organizationally, in the variables and nodes dictating patient outcomes. Clinical complexities cannot be simplified but have to be navigated in an optimized way to improve clinical outcomes.We present our analysis of the complexities faced clinically and, in our local healthcare system.
1Department of General Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, India.Department of General Medicine, Government Medical College, Sangareddy, India.3Independent Researcher.4Department of General Medicine, Vijaya Hospital, Godavarikhani, Telangana, India

2022 : 

2) Dhavala A, Samitinjay A, Khairkar P, Podder V, Price A, Fatima SH, Biswas R. Integrated case-based clinical approach in understanding pathways, complexities, pitfalls and challenges in neurodegenerative disorders. Am J Neurodegener Dis. 2022 Jun 20;11(2):22-33. PMID: 35874938; PMCID: PMC9301093.
Authors: Aashitha Dhavala 1, Aditya Samitinjay 2, Praveen Khairkar 3, Vivek Podder 4, Amy Price 5, Syeda Hira Fatima 6, Rakesh Biswas 7
Affiliations:1Junior Resident in General Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences Narketpally, India.2Senior Resident in General Medicine, Government General & Chest Hospital Erragada, Hyderabad, India.3HOD & Professor in Psychiatry, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences Narketpally, India.4Visiting Lecturer, The University of Adelaide Australia.5Senior Research Scientist Stanford School of Medicine CA, USA.6Junior Resident in Psychiatry, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences Narketpally, India.7HOD & Professor in General Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences Narketpally 508254, India.

Summary: We performed this study within our existing framework of a CBBLE (publication number 2018) when we received an invitation from the American Journal of Neurodegenerative Disorders (AJND). Psychoses can develop in patients with brain disorders secondary to neurodegenerative disorders, tumours, or cerebrovascular accidents. We explored the organic psychopathology of psychosis in neurodegenerative disorders. We postulate that movement disorder is an obvious, logical bio-clinical marker towards organic psychopathology of psychiatric symptoms found in neurodegenerative disorders. 

3) Talukder AK, Schriml L, Ghosh A, Biswas R, Chakrabarti P, Haas RE. Diseasomics: Actionable machine interpretable disease knowledge at the point-of-care. PLOS Digit Health. 2022 Oct 20;1(10):e0000128. doi: 10.1371/journal.pdig.0000128. PMID: 36812614; PMCID: PMC9931276.
Summary: This paper presents an artificial intelligence (AI)-based approach for integrating comprehensive disease knowledge, to support physicians and healthcare workers in arriving at accurate diagnoses at the point-of-care.

Authors: Asoke K Talukder 1 2, Lynn Schriml 3, Arnab Ghosh 4, Rakesh Biswas 5, Prantar Chakrabarti 6 7, Roland E Haas 8
Affiliations:1SRIT India, Bangalore, India.2Computer Science & Engineering, National Institute of Technology Karnataka (NITK), Surathkal, India.3University of Maryland School of Medicine, Maryland, United States of America.4Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Mumbai, India.5Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, Telangana, India.

4) Samitinjay A, Ali Z, Biswas R. Nontubercular mycobacterial cough. BMJ Case Rep. 2022 Mar 7;15(3):e246285. doi: 10.1136/bcr-2021-246285. PMID: 35256362; PMCID: PMC8905925.
Summary: Habitual cough suppression leading to non-tuberculous mycobacteria infections and bronchiectasis has been reported. We aim to highlight two key issues-diagnosing MAC infections in a tuberculosis endemic country, and OSA and its long-term clinical implications

Authors: Aditya Samitinjay 1, Zulfikar Ali 2, Rakesh Biswas 3

Affiliations 1General Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, Telangana, India.2Radiology, Sree Venkateswara Diagnostics, Kadapa, Andhra Pradesh, India.3General Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, Telangana, India

5) Samitinjay A, Karri SR, Khairkar P, Biswas R. Traumatic subdural haematoma: integrating case-based clinical judgement with guidelines. BMJ Case Rep. 2020 Sep 6;13(9):e233197. doi: 10.1136/bcr-2019-233197. PMID: 32895250; PMCID: PMC7476468.
Summary : This paper, aims to present two pressing issues—first, strict adherence to guidelines may not always bring the best outcomes and that clinical judgement and critical appraisal of literature is required to improve patient-related outcomes. Second, in a country where nearly two-third of the total annual health expenditure comes from out of pocket, expensive equipment like invasive ICP monitors and advanced neurosurgical equipment may not be readily available and hence it becomes imperative that general surgery residents, particularly in rural tertiary hospitals, are adequately trained in basic neurosurgical care before an appropriate referral is made.
Authors: Aditya Samitinjay,1 Satya Revanth Karri,2 Praveen Khairkar,2 and 1Rakesh Biswas1Department of General Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, Telangana, India
2Department of Psychiatry, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, Telangana, India

2020:

6) Ghosh R., Dubey S., Chatterjee S., Finsterer J., Biswas R., Lahiri D., Ray B.K. Primary hypoparathyroidism and multiple neuraxial involvement in mitochondrial disorder due to the variant m.15043G>A in MT-CYBJ. Neurol. Sci. 2020;414 
Authors: Ritwik Ghosh 1, Souvik Dubey 2, Subhankar Chatterjee 3, Josef Finsterer 4, Rakesh Biswas 5, Durjoy Lahiri 2, Biman Kanti Ray 2
Affiliations: 1Department of General Medicine, Burdwan Medical College & Hospital, Burdwan, West Bengal, India.2Department of Neuromedicine, Bangur Institute of Neurosciences, Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research & SSKM Hospital, Kolkata, West Bengal, India.3Department of General Medicine, Rajendra Institute of Medical Sciences, Ranchi, Jharkhand, India.4Department of Neurology, Krankenanstalt Rudolfstiftung, Messerli Institute, Vienna, Austria
.5Department of Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, Nalgonda, Telangana, India.
Citation and summary:
Cited by : Alston CL, Blakely EL, McFarland R, Taylor RW. The m.15043G > A MT-CYB variant is not a pathogenic mtDNA variant. J Neurol Sci. 2020 Oct 15;417:116950. doi: 10.1016/j.jns.2020.116950.
Summary :This report highlights the importance of full and thorough interpretation of patient genetic data to ensure that the correct diagnosis is ascribed [1]. Moreover, it validates the clinical utility of a diagnostic biopsy and the use of patient material for the functional validation of genetic findings as the inadequate assessment of pathogenicity has the potential to result in patient misdiagnosis and mismanagement.

2019

7) Podder V, Price A, Sivapuram MS, Biswas R. Middle-aged man who could not afford an angioplasty. BMJ Case Rep. 2019 Mar 31;12(3):e227118. doi: 10.1136/bcr-2018-227118. PMID: 30936331; PMCID: PMC6453268.
Summary: This report highlights the challenges and consequences of inappropriate overuse of percutaneous coronary interventions PCI. Also, we outline the current lack of shared decision-making among patients and physicians for the PCI procedure. The challenges, inherent in the assumptions that overuse of PCI is evidence-based, are discussed including recommendations for the practice of evidence based medicine for this intervention.
Authors: Vivek Podder 1, Amy Price 2 3, Madhava Sai Sivapuram 4, Rakesh Biswas 5
Affiliations 1Department of Medicine, Tairunnessa Memorial Medical College and Hospital, Gazipur, Bangladesh.2Department of Continuing Education, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.3Stanford MedicineX, University of Stanford, School of Medicine, Stanford, USA.4Department of Medicine, Dr Pinnamaneni Siddhartha Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Foundation, Chinoutapalli, Andhra Pradesh, India.5Department of Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, Telangana, India.

2018

8)Webb E, Kali Vanan N, Biswas R. Empirical treatment of tuberculosis: TB or not TB? BMJ Case Rep. 2018 Jul 10;2018:bcr2018224166. doi: 10.1136/bcr-2018-224166. PMID: 
29991543; PMCID: PMC6047727.
Summary : In this report we highlight the challenges faced due to lack of centralised medical records (which can prevent unnecessary investigations and treatment and we also share a few  user driven healthcare solutions deployed).
Authors: Eika Webb 1, Narmadha Kali Vanan 1, Rakesh Biswas 2
Affiliations: 1Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.2Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, Telangana, India.

9) Podder V, Price A, Sivapuram MS, Ronghe A, Katta S, Gupta AK, Biswas R. Collective Conversational Peer Review of Journal Submission: A Tool to Integrate Medical Education and Practice. Ann Neurosci. 2018 Jul;25(2):112-119. doi: 10.1159/000488135. Epub 2018 Apr 3. PMID: 30140123; PMCID: PMC6103343
Summary: In this study, we demonstrate a collective collaborative, conversational, pre-publication peer review of a randomized controlled trial. Open peer review involving a group of reviewers at a time produces multidirectional reviewing concepts, thus helps to improve the quality of paper and also may reduce the time between review and publication.
Authors: Vivek Podder 1, Amy Price 2 3, Madhava Sai Sivapuram 4, Ashwini Ronghe 5, Srija Katta 6, Avinash Kumar Gupta 7, Rakesh Biswas 8
Affiliations:1Undergraduate Medical Student of Tairunnessa Memorial Medical College, Dhaka, Bangladesh.2Patient Editor (Research and Evaluation), The BMJ, London, United Kingdom.3Continuing Education, The University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.4Undergraduate Medical Student of Dr. Pinnamaneni Siddhartha Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Foundation, Vijayawada, India.5Undergraduate Medical Student of Grant Medical College and Sir JJ Group of Hospitals, Mumbai, India.6Undergraduate Pharmacy Student of St. Peters Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Warangal, India.7Undergraduate Medical Student of Universal College of Medical Sciences, Bhairahawa, Nepal.8Professor of Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Nalgonda, India.
10) Podder V, Dhakal B, Shaik GUS, Sundar K, Sivapuram MS, Chattu VK, Biswas R. Developing a Case-Based Blended Learning Ecosystem to Optimize Precision Medicine: Reducing Overdiagnosis and Overtreatment. Healthcare (Basel). 2018 Jul 10;6(3):78. doi: 10.3390/healthcare6030078. PMID: 29996517; PMCID: PMC6163835.
Summary: We examine the role of precision medicine within a case-based blended learning ecosystem (CBBLE) as a practicable tool to reduce overdiagnosis and overtreatment.
Authors: Vivek Podder 1, Binod Dhakal 2, Gousia Ummae Salma Shaik 3, Kaushik Sundar 4, Madhava Sai Sivapuram 5, Vijay Kumar Chattu 6, Rakesh Biswas 7
Affiliations:1Department of Internal Medicine, Tairunnessa Memorial Medical College, Gazipur 1704, Bangladesh. drvivekpodder@gmail.com.2Division of Hematology/Oncology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI 53226, USA. bdhakal@mcw.edu.3Department of Internal Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally 508254, India. drshaiksalma@gmail.com.4Department of Neurology, Rajagiri Hospital, Chunanangamvely, Aluva 683112, India. skaushik85@gmail.com.5Department of Internal Medicine, Dr. Pinnamaneni Siddhartha Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Foundation, Chinaoutapalli 521101, India. madhavasai2011@gmail.com.6Department of Paraclinical Sciences, Faculty of Medical Sciences, The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine 0000, Trinidad and Tobago. vijay.chattu@sta.uwi.edu.7Department of Internal Medicine, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally