Phase 1: Integrated Basic Science & Clinical Courses
M1 Curriculum
First Year Curriculum
Credit Hours: 9 | Course #: 26950134 | ||
Course Directors: Bruce Giffin, PhD Email:bruce.giffin@uc.edu Joseph LaPorta, MD Email: laportjh@ucmail.uc.edu Coordinator | |||
Course Description: The Brain, Mind, and Behavior course provides varied learning opportunities to assist the medical student in developing a strong structural, functional, and clinically oriented knowledge base in the neurosciences and to develop an understanding of the pathologic characteristics, signs, and symptoms of and treatment modalities for, common neurologic and psychiatric disorders. This course meets the prerequisites for the Phase 2 psychiatry and neurology clerkships and covers most of the disorders listed in the NBME Step 1 content outline. Course Outcomes:
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Credit Hours: 1
Course #:
26950111
Course Directors:
Matthew Kelleher, MD
Email: kellehmw@ucmail.uc.edu
Danielle Weber, MD
Email: weber2de@ucmail.uc.edu
Course Coordinator:
Vickie Symmes
Office: MSB E350
Phone: 513-558-7725
Email: vickie.symmes@uc.edu
Course Description:
This course is designed to create high-fidelity simulated environment to allow students to develop the knowledge, skills and professional behaviors to navigate a patient encounter. The start of CS 101 the students learn the fundamentals of a medical interview (gathering history). Students then learn to perform a detailed head-to-toe physical exam. They develop and refine their communication skills with standardized patients, as well as learn proper professional behavior.
After they finish the fundamentals, they transition to an emphasis on more problem focused history and physical exam, as students work in teams to evaluate standardized patient cases aligned with the content being learned in the respective organ blocks. Students continue to develop and practice their history and physical exam skills, and learn to use the information they gather to formulate a differential diagnosis. They also learn how to order and interpret lab/imaging data in a cost effective manner. Students are then expected to use lab data, combined with the patient's clinical information, to refine their differential diagnosis and communicate their assessent to the patient. During the entire encounter, students may access the medical literature to ensure their deisions and management proposals are sound and evidence based. Supervising Physicians work with teams after the encounter to help them understand the clinical case and provide them with greater detail regarding pathophysiology, diagnostic testing and treatment options.
Course Outcomes:
- Gather a history and perform a physical exam (EPA-1)
- Prioritize a differential diagnosis following a clinical encounter (EPA-2)
- Recommend/Interpret common diagnostic and screening tests (EPA-3)
- Document a clinical encounter in a patient record (EPA-5)
- Form clinical questions and retrieve evidence to advance patient care (EPA-7)
- Work collaboratively with fellow students to provide safe and effective patient care
- Understand and display professional behaviors expected of health care professionals
- Incorporate feedback to improve performance
Credit Hours: 1
Course #:
26950115
Course Directors:
Matthew Kelleher, MD
Email: kellehmw@ucmail.uc.edu
Danielle Weber, MD
Email: weber2de@ucmail.uc.edu
Course Coordinator:
Vickie Symmes
Office: MSB E350
Phone: 513-558-7725
Email: vickie.symmes@uc.edu
Course Description:
This course is designed to create high-fidelity simulated environment to allow students to develop the knowledge, skills and professional behaviors to navigate a patient encounter. The emphasis is placed on a problem focused history and physical exam, as students work in teams to evaluate standardized patient cases aligned with the content being learned in the respective organ blocks. Students continue to develop and practice their history and physical exam skills, and learn to use the information they gather to formulate a differential diagnosis. They also learn how to order and interpret lab/imaging data in a cost effective manner. Students are then expected to use lab data, combined with the patient's clinical information, to refine their differential diagnosis and communicate their assessent to the patient. During the entire encounter, students may access the medical literature to ensure their deisions and management proposals are sound and evidence based. Supervising Physicians work with teams after the encounter to help them understand the clinical case and provide them with greater detail regarding pathophysiology, diagnostic testing and treatment options.
\Course Outcomes:
- Gather a history and perform a physical exam (EPA-1)
- Prioritize a differential diagnosis following a clinical encounter (EPA-2)
- Recommend/Interpret common diagnostic and screening tests (EPA-3)
- Document a clinical encounter in a patient record (EPA-5)
- Form clinical questions and retrieve evidence to advance patient care (EPA-7)
- Recognize a patient requiring urgent or emergent care and initiate evaluation and management (EPA-10)
- Work collaboratively with fellow students to provide safe and effective patient care
- Understand and display professional behaviors expected of health care professionals
- Incorporate feedback to improve performance
Credit Hours: 3 | Course #: 26950131 |
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Course Director: Kara Ciani, MD Email: schlanrv@ucmail.uc.edu Course Coordinator: Carolyn Egbert Office: Medical Sciences Building G453A Phone: 513-558-5580 Email: egbertcn@ucmail.uc.edu |
The Fundamentals of Doctoring Clinical Experience is a three semester program sequence for first and second year medical students designed to introduce every medical student to the fundamentals of doctoring, moving from learning the concepts to practicing the specific skills and capacities. The fundamentals of doctoring include ten steps used in every patient encounter and must be practiced in order to gain mastery as a physician.
This introductory experience pairs each student with an individual community preceptor and his or her patients to first observe how the steps are performed in practice by the preceptor followed by the student getting to apply and practice the steps. Through the semesters you are learning the basic science foundations and learning clinical skills, you will gain comfort with doing the fundamentals through interacting with real patients.
The goal is to give you a solid foundation for the third year clinical rotations where the fundamentals are practiced and monitored every day. Your performance in third year, a very important criterion for future residency applications, begins with FoD. If the steps are not competently performed in residency, the next stage in training, then a resident is likely to remediate. Finally, if the steps are not mastered in clinical practice, then poor patient outcomes will result. This is why they are called the fundamentals—they are the foundation for effective performance as a student doctor, a resident and a practicing physician.
Overall course objectives:
- Apply the 10 fundamentals of doctoring necessary for the care of patients.
- Integrate basic science material into the clinical care of patient.
- Develop a foundation for a professional identity as a physician
Credit Hours: 8 | Course #: 26950133 | ||
Course Directors: Coordinatorl | |||
The course contains didactic and interactive instruction in aspects of normal structure and function as well as diseases of the blood and gastrointestinal systems; and building upon basic cell biology this course contains introductory aspects of clinical oncology. This integrative course provides foundational knowledge necessary for career exploration in internal medicine (esp. gastroenterology, hematology and oncology). Students will gain an ability to recognize and describe disease states, interpret laboratory and radiological findings and continue developing differential diagnosis skills. Students will be given opportunity to make connections between diseases studied within this course and diseases studied in previous courses; especially as it relates to presenting features and differential diagnosing. Course Outcomes:
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Credit Hours: 2 |
Course #: 101: 26950128 102: 26950129 |
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Course Directors: Houman Varghai, MD Email: houman.varghai@uc.edu Course Coordinator: Alicia Boards, PhD Office: Medical Sciences Building Room G453A Phone: 513-558-5567 Email: boardsar@ucmail.uc.edu |
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First, the overall goal of the Learning Communities is to provide clinical education that will help integrate all aspects of the curriculum over the first two years of medical school. The cornerstone of the Learning Community activities is case discussion. Each week students are given patient cases, which provide clinical background and relevance for the basic sciences they are learning in the Organ Blocks. These case discussions will occur in small groups that are facilitated by a practicing clinical faculty member. Students will develop clinical problem-solving and critical thinking skills from the beginning of medical school. To prepare for these case discussions, students need to seek out information from a variety of resources in order to answer probe questions about the case, prior to meeting to discuss the case. Development of these self-directed learning skills is very important to one’s success as a physician, so we work to develop these skills early in the curriculum. Your ability to perform these self-directed learning skills will be part of the assessment of your performance and you will be given feedback on this. Another benefit of the Learning Communities is the opportunity to work in small groups. Relationship building and teamwork is an important part of being a successful health care professional. No one person has all the answers or the exact same set of skills as another student, so working together to solve problems or complete a task is an everyday occurrence in medicine (e.g. the use of consultants.) In addition to clinical thinking skills, Learning Communities focuses on teaching the many aspects of the art of medicine that do not fall under a particular specialty or domain such as physiology or internal medicine. While much of this material is covered in Physician and Society, a small group format is the best way to address many of these topics and issues, which really boil down to how to effectively interact with patients and the health care system, and the potential hurdles one will face as a physician. In summary, the Learning Community experience helps students develop the thought processes and behaviors needed to be successful as a physician. While there is much factual knowledge needed to be a successful physician (and much testing to assess whether one is able to assimilate this knowledge), Learning Communities provides the major forum for students in the first two years of the curriculum to work on these other skills, and to receive feedback on their progress in developing these skills. This experience provides for a smoother transition to the clinical rotations in the last two years of medical school. Overall course objectives:
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Credit Hours: 8 | Course #: 26950119 | ||
Course Directors: Timothy Foster, MD Coordinator | |||
Course Description: The Musculoskeletal-Integumentary (MSK-I) course provides a foundation in the structure and function of the musculoskeletal, integumentary, and periphreal nervous systems. Foundational science content realted to the anatomy, histology, and physiology of these systems is aligned and integrated with clinical specialties such as pathology, rheumatology, neurology, and dermatology to provide students with a basis for understanding how to recognize, evaluate, and treat common muscuoloskeletal and skin disorders. Course Outcomes:
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Credit Hours: 6 Course #: 26950112
Course Directors:
Lisa Kelly, MD
Email: lisa.kelly@uc.edu
Reid Hartmann, MD
Email: hartmar@UCMAIL.UC.EDU
Course Coordinator:
Alicia Boards, PhD
Office: Medical Sciences Building, Room G453A
Phone: 513-558-5567
Email: boardsar@ucmail.uc.edu
Course Description:
The Physician and Society Course introduces the medical profession and the healthcare system, exploring aspects of medicine beyond basic science that directly influence patient care quality. Multiple tracks are woven throughout this two-year longitudinal curriculum, including community and population health, business of medicine, ethics, professionalism, and the emerging physician identity.
The course begins as a two-week intensive block at the start of medical school, followed by a longitudinal experience throughout the first two years. Service Learning is a critical component, where students collaborate with a community partner through their Learning Communities. Together, they develop a project based on community needs, culminating in a poster presentation at the end of the first year.
Course Outcomes:
- Apply bioethical principles and professionalism-based behavior with patients, colleagues, and the community.
- Describe the organization and financing of the U.S. healthcare system and its impact on access, utilization, and quality of care.
- Explain basic medico-legal responsibilities of physicians.
- Outline the role of empathy and respect in caring for people from diverse cultural and socio-economic backgrounds.
- Describe core concepts of quality improvement and patient safety in medical practice.
- Apply evidence-based practice to clinical decision-making and public health interventions.
- Develop awareness of physician identity as both a clinician and a team member.
- Create strategies to advocate for patients and advance health equity.
- Analyze determinants of health that affect patients and communities.
- Develop strategies for self-reflection and lifelong learning to support professional development.
Credit Hours: 8 | Course #: 26950132 | ||
Course Directors: Emma Schoch, PhD Email: keith.stringer@uc.edu Coordinator | |||
Course Description: The Scientific Foundations of Medicine course prepares students for the organ-based courses that follow by presenting the foundational concepts and principles of molecular and cellular medicine. These principles span many disciplines including biochemistry, cell biology, physiology, pharmacology, histology, immunology, microbiology, anatomy, embryology, and pathology. Course Outcomes:
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M2 Curriculum
Second Year Curriculum
Credit Hours: 9
Course #: 26950237
Co-Course Directors:
Heather Christensen, PhD
Email: christht@ucmail.uc.edu
Donald Lowrie, PhD
Email: dj.lowrie@uc.edu
David Harris, PhD
Email: harri2di@ucmail.uc.edu
Coordinator
Office: Medical Sciences Building Room G455A
Phone: 513-558-3621
Email: becky.trippel@uc.edu
This course will utilize an integrative approach to examine the structure and function of the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems in health and disease. Specific disciplines covered will include anatomy, biochemistry, embryology, epidemiology, genetics, histology, immunology, microbiology, pathology, pharmacology and physiology. Study of disease states will include the interrelationships
between the pathologic and physiologic responses of the heart, vasculature, upper respiratory system, and lungs. Current treatment options, including pharmacological and surgical approaches, will be discussed, with a focus toward learning the mechanistic modes of action. Clinical problem solving will be used as the bridge to integrate the basic and clinical information into a practical fund of knowledge that will serve as a solid foundation for life- long learning and delivering high quality patient care.
Overall course objectives:
- Develop skills in independent learning that will enable application of basic and clinical sciences to clinical practice.
- Describe the non-pathological development, structure and function of the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems.
- Construct a model showing how the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems jointly function to maintain a dynamic physiologic homeostasis.
- Evaluate the basic science required to understand the pathophysiologic mechanisms responsible for common clinical disorders of the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems.
- Describe standard therapeutic approaches to treat common diseases affecting the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems.
- Distinguish the pathogenesis of diseases that affects the cardiovascular and pulmonary organ systems, and discuss how pathologic changes in anatomy and physiology in these organ systems alter the function of the other organ systems.
- Formulate an initial differential diagnosis for common cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases based upon routinely used diagnostic tests.
- Explain the basic science underlying the therapeutic benefits and adverse side effects of pharmacologic agents.
- Explain how the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems work together to deliver acquire and deliver oxygen to, and remove carbon dioxide from, the tissues.
- Explain the basic science underlying the therapeutic benefits and adverse side effects of pharmacologic agents.
Credit Hours: 4 each | Course #: 201: 26950218 202: 26950219 |
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Course Directors: Matthew Kelleher, MD Email: kellehmw@ucmail.uc.edu
Danielle Weber, MD
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Clinical Skills 201-202 provides students with the knowledge, skills and attitudes needed to manage a variety of patients in the clinical setting. Through the use of simulation with standardized (simulated) patients (SP) and Standardized Patient Instructors (SPI), students work in teams to develop their data gathering, interpretation, clinical reasoning and communication skills. In addition students learn the importance of professionalism which is developed and evaluated throughout the course. Faculty provide guidance in the development of these skills throughout the course and provide context for students as they prepare for the M3/M4 clinical rotations. (Note: CS 101 this will be the complete basic history and physical exam. CS 102-202 will focus on problem based history and physical exam integrated with the organ system block.)
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Credit Hours: 6 | Course #: 26950239 | |
Course Directors: Course Coordinator: | ||
The course contains didactic and interactive instruction in aspects of normal structure and function as well as diseases of the endocrine and male and female reproductive systems. This integrative course provides foundational knowledge necessary for career exploration in internal medicine (esp. endocrinology), obstetrics and gynecology, and urology. Students will gain an ability to recognize and describe disease states, interpret laboratory and radiological findings and continue developing differential diagnosis skills. Lastly, as the final organ-system based course, students will be given opportunity to make connections between diseases studied within this course and diseases studied in previous courses; especially as it relates to presenting features and differential diagnosing. Overall course objectives:
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Credit Hours: 201 = 3 202 = 2 |
Course #: 201: 26950235 202: 26950236 |
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Course Director: Kara Ciani, MD Email: schlanrv@ucmail.uc.edu Course Coordinator: Carolyn Egbert Office: Medical Sciences Building G453D Phone: 513-558-5580 Email: egbertcn@ucmail.uc.edu |
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This three semester program sequence for first and second year medical students is designed to introduce every medical student to the fundamentals of doctoring, moving from learning the concepts to practicing the specific skills and capacities. The fundamentals of doctoring include ten steps used in every patient encounter and must be practiced in order to gain mastery as a physician. This introductory experience pairs each student with an individual community preceptor and his or her patients to first observe how the steps are performed in practice by the preceptor followed by the student getting to apply and practice the steps. Through the semesters you are learning the basic science foundations and learning clinical skills, you will gain comfort with doing the fundamentals through interacting with real patients. The goal is to give you a solid foundation for the third year clinical rotations where the fundamentals are practiced and monitored every day. Your performance in third year, a very important criterion for future residency applications, begins with FoD. If the steps are not competently performed in residency, the next stage in training, then a resident is likely to remediate. Finally, if the steps are not mastered in clinical practice, then poor patient outcomes will result. This is why they are called the fundamentals—they are the foundation for effective performance as a student doctor, a resident and a practicing physician. Overall course objectives:
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Credit Hours: 3 | Course #: 26950228 | ||
Course Director: Gina Burg Office: Medical Sciences Building Room G453C Phone: 513-558-8447 Email: gina.burg@uc.edu |
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2 hours of individual study prior to a 4 hour lecture/small group session. Overall course objectives:
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Credit Hours: 201 = 2 202 = 1 | Course #: 201: 26950232 202: 26950233 | ||
Course Directors: Houman Varghai Email:vargha@ucmail.uc.edu Course Coordinator: Alicia Boards, PhD Office: Medical Sciences Building Room G453A Phone: 513-558-5567 Email: boardsar@ucmail.uc.edu | |||
First, the overall goal of the Learning Communities is to provide clinical education that will help integrate all aspects of the curriculum over the first two years of medical school. The cornerstone of the Learning Community activities is case discussion. Each week students are given patient cases, which provide clinical background and relevance for the basic sciences they are learning in the Organ Blocks. These case discussions will occur in small groups that are facilitated by a practicing clinical faculty member. Students will develop clinical problem-solving and critical thinking skills from the beginning of medical school. Overall course objectives:
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Credit Hours: 2 | Course #: 26950224 | ||
Course Directors: Margaret Powers-Fletcher, PhD Coordinator Office: Medical Sciences Building Room G455A | |||
The Multi-Systems Block will address diseases and pathological processes that span the realm of the human body. Topics within the block are selected to highlight the interaction between different organ systems, and across different life stages. To this end, the course covers diseases that affect multiple organ systems, including many rheumatologic disorders, diseases caused by microorganisms, and antimicrobial agents. Overall course objectives:
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Credit Hours: 10
Course #: 26950238
Course Directors:
Heather Christensen, PhD
Email:heather.christensen@uc.edu
Aaron Marshall, PhD
Email: marshaao@ucmail.uc.edu
Niralee Patel, MD
Email: patel5nr@ucmail.uc.edu
Coordinator:
In this course, you will examine the structure and function of the renal and gastrointestinal systems in health and disease. This will be accomplished through an integrative approach that combines the disciplines of anatomy, biochemistry, embryology, epidemiology, genetics, histology, immunology, microbiology, pathology, pharmacology, and physiology. The study of diseased states for these two major organ systems will involve an understanding of the interrelationships between the pathologic and physiologic responses of the kidneys, excretory structures, alimentary canal, and hepatobiliary structures. As a part of this course, current treatment options (pharmacological and surgical approaches) will also be discussed, with a focus on the mechanistic modes of action. Throughout the course, you will have opportunities to apply your basic science knowledge to clinical scenarios as a means of exploring nephrology, gastroenterology, hepatology (or other relevant medical fields). Specifically, clinical problem solving and self-directed learning sessions will be used as the bridge to integrate basic and clinical information into a practical fund of knowledge that will serve as a solid foundation for lifelong learning and delivering high-quality patient care.
Overall course objectives:
- Describe the (non-pathologic) development, structure and function of the renal system.
- Evaluate the basic science required to understand the pathophysiologic mechanisms responsible for common clinical disorders of the renal system.
- Explain the control of acid-base balance in health and disease.
- Formulate an initial differential diagnosis for common renal diseases based upon routinely used diagnostic tests.
- Describe standard therapeutic approaches to treat common diseases affecting each of these organ systems.
- Explain the basic science underlying the therapeutic benefits and adverse side effects of pharmacologic agents.
- Develop skills in independent learning that will enable application of basic and clinical sciences to clinical practice.
- Develop a differential diagnoses based on signs, symptoms and associated imaging and laboratories results.
- Describe the basic anatomy of gastrointestinal system from embryonic development through maturation.
- Describe the physiology of the gastrointestinal system of prepubescents, as well as mature and aging adults.
- Apply anatomical and physiological principals to pathogeneses associated with the gastrointestinal system.
- Recognize the signs and symptoms associated with pathologies of gastrointestinal system.
- Identify and describe the mechanism of action for treatment modalities used to ameliorate gastrointestinal system pathologies.
- Apply socio-cultural factors to the assessment of disease incidence and progression in at risk populations.
Credit Hours: 3 | Course #: 26950217 | ||
Course Directors: Lisa Kelly, MD Email: lisa.kelly@uc.edu Reid Hartmann, MD Email: hartmar@UCMAIL.UC.EDU Course Coordinator: Alicia Boards, PhD Office: Medical Sciences Building Room G453A Phone: 513-558-5567 Email: boardsar@ucmail.uc.edu | |||
The Physician and Society 201 and 202 courses serves as a continuation and more in depth exploration of the main theme areas of the business and law of medicine, physician identity and professionalism, community and population health, ethics and the humanities. This segment of this longitudinal curriculum includes large group sessions that are integrated within the organ system “red blocks” and sessions within the learning communities. Overall course objectives:
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Heather Christensen, PhD
Phase 1 Curriculum Director
Contact Us
Office of Curriculum Managementand Integration
Medical Sciences Building Room G453 - G456
231 Albert Sabin Way
PO Box 670520
Cincinnati, OH 45267-0520
Mail Location: 0520
Phone: 513-558-1795
Fax: 513-558-4949