• Medical teacher · Nov 2013

    The CanMEDS framework: relevant but not quite the whole story.

    • Nadine van der Lee, Joanne P I Fokkema, Michiel Westerman, Erik W Driessen, Cees P M van der Vleuten, Albert J J A Scherpbier, and Fedde Scheele.
    • St Lucas Andreas Hospital , The Netherlands.
    • Med Teach. 2013 Nov 1; 35 (11): 949-55.

    BackgroundDespite acknowledgement that the Canadian Medical Educational Directives for Specialists (CanMEDS) framework covers the relevant competencies of physicians, many educators and medical professionals struggle to translate the CanMEDS roles into comprehensive training programmes for specific specialties.AimTo gain insight into the applicability of the CanMEDS framework to guide the design of educational programmes for specific specialties by exploring stakeholders' perceptions of specialty specific competencies and examining differences between those competencies and the CanMEDS framework.MethodsThis case study is a sequel to a study among ObsGyn specialists. It explores the perspectives of patients, midwives, nurses, general practitioners, and hospital boards on gynaecological competencies and compares these with the CanMEDS framework.ResultsClinical expertise, reflective practice, collaboration, a holistic view, and involvement in practice management were perceived to be important competencies for gynaecological practice. Although all the competencies were covered by the CanMEDS framework, there were some mismatches between stakeholders' perceptions of the importance of some competencies and their position in the framework.ConclusionThe CanMEDS framework appears to offer relevant building blocks for specialty specific postgraduate training, which should be combined with the results of an exploration of specialty specific competencies to arrive at a postgraduate curriculum that is in alignment with professional practice.

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