A “fit for purpose” framework for medical education accreditation system design

Abstract Background Accreditation is a key feature of many medical education systems, helping to ensure that programs teach and assess learners according to applicable standards, provide optimal learning environments, and produce professionals who are competent to practise in challenging and evolvin...

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Main Authors: Sarah Taber, Nesibe Akdemir, Lisa Gorman, Marta van Zanten, Jason R. Frank
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-09-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02122-4
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spelling doaj-d6f10efa54214117b604ebaa43a838042020-11-25T03:23:50ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202020-09-0120S111210.1186/s12909-020-02122-4A “fit for purpose” framework for medical education accreditation system designSarah Taber0Nesibe Akdemir1Lisa Gorman2Marta van Zanten3Jason R. Frank4Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of CanadaOLVG Teaching HospitalRoyal College of Physicians and Surgeons of CanadaFoundation for Advancement of International Medical Education and ResearchRoyal College of Physicians and Surgeons of CanadaAbstract Background Accreditation is a key feature of many medical education systems, helping to ensure that programs teach and assess learners according to applicable standards, provide optimal learning environments, and produce professionals who are competent to practise in challenging and evolving health care systems. Although most medical education accreditation systems apply similar standards domains and process elements, there can be substantial variation among accreditation systems at the level of design and implementation. A discussion group at the 2013 World Summit on Outcomes-Based Accreditation examined best practices in health professional education accreditation systems and identified that the literature examining the effectiveness of different approaches to accreditation is scant. Although some frameworks for accreditation design do exist, they are often specific to one phase of the medical education continuum. Main text This paper attempts to define a framework for the operational design of medical education accreditation that articulates design options as well as their contextual and practical implications. It assumes there is no single set of best practices in accreditation system development but, rather, an underlying set of design decisions. A “fit for purpose” approach aims to ensure that a system, policy, or program is designed and operationalized in a manner best suited to local needs and contexts. This approach is aligned with emerging models for education and international development that espouse decentralization. Conclusion The framework highlights that, rather than a single best practice, variation among accreditation systems is appropriate provided that is it tailored to the needs of local contexts. Our framework is intended to provide guidance to administrators, policy-makers, and educators regarding different approaches to medical education accreditation and their applicability and appropriateness in local contexts.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02122-4Accreditation frameworkAccreditation system designContinuous quality improvementMedical education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah Taber
Nesibe Akdemir
Lisa Gorman
Marta van Zanten
Jason R. Frank
spellingShingle Sarah Taber
Nesibe Akdemir
Lisa Gorman
Marta van Zanten
Jason R. Frank
A “fit for purpose” framework for medical education accreditation system design
BMC Medical Education
Accreditation framework
Accreditation system design
Continuous quality improvement
Medical education
author_facet Sarah Taber
Nesibe Akdemir
Lisa Gorman
Marta van Zanten
Jason R. Frank
author_sort Sarah Taber
title A “fit for purpose” framework for medical education accreditation system design
title_short A “fit for purpose” framework for medical education accreditation system design
title_full A “fit for purpose” framework for medical education accreditation system design
title_fullStr A “fit for purpose” framework for medical education accreditation system design
title_full_unstemmed A “fit for purpose” framework for medical education accreditation system design
title_sort “fit for purpose” framework for medical education accreditation system design
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Abstract Background Accreditation is a key feature of many medical education systems, helping to ensure that programs teach and assess learners according to applicable standards, provide optimal learning environments, and produce professionals who are competent to practise in challenging and evolving health care systems. Although most medical education accreditation systems apply similar standards domains and process elements, there can be substantial variation among accreditation systems at the level of design and implementation. A discussion group at the 2013 World Summit on Outcomes-Based Accreditation examined best practices in health professional education accreditation systems and identified that the literature examining the effectiveness of different approaches to accreditation is scant. Although some frameworks for accreditation design do exist, they are often specific to one phase of the medical education continuum. Main text This paper attempts to define a framework for the operational design of medical education accreditation that articulates design options as well as their contextual and practical implications. It assumes there is no single set of best practices in accreditation system development but, rather, an underlying set of design decisions. A “fit for purpose” approach aims to ensure that a system, policy, or program is designed and operationalized in a manner best suited to local needs and contexts. This approach is aligned with emerging models for education and international development that espouse decentralization. Conclusion The framework highlights that, rather than a single best practice, variation among accreditation systems is appropriate provided that is it tailored to the needs of local contexts. Our framework is intended to provide guidance to administrators, policy-makers, and educators regarding different approaches to medical education accreditation and their applicability and appropriateness in local contexts.
topic Accreditation framework
Accreditation system design
Continuous quality improvement
Medical education
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02122-4
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