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Dive into the research topics where Rebecca Shunk is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebecca Shunk.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2006

The PRIME Curriculum: Clinical Research Training During Residency

Rj Kohlwes; Rebecca Shunk; Andrew L. Avins; Judy Garber; Stephen Bent; Michael G. Shlipak

AbstractAIM: The Primary Medical Education (PRIME) program is an outpatient-based, internal medicine residency track nested within the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) categorical medicine program. Primary Medical Education is based at the San Francisco Veteran’s Affairs Medical Center (VAMC), 1 of 3 teaching hospitals at UCSF. The program accepts 8 UCSF medicine residents annually, who differentiate into PRIME after internship. In 2000, we implemented a novel research methods curriculum with the dual purposes of teaching basic epidemiology skills and providing mentored opportunities for clinical research projects during residency. SETTING: Single academic internal medicine program. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: The PRIME curriculum utilizes didactic lecture, frequent journal clubs, work-in-progress sessions, and active mentoring to enable residents to “try out” a clinical research project during residency. PROGRAM EVALUATION: Among 32 residents in 4 years, 22 residents have produced 20 papers in peer-reviewed journals, 1 paper under review, and 2 book chapters. Their clinical evaluations are equivalent to other UCSF medicine residents. DISCUSSION: While learning skills in evidence-based medicine, residents can conduct high-quality research. Utilizing a collaboration of General Internal Medicine researchers and educators, our curriculum affords residents the opportunity to “try-out” clinical research as a potential future career choice.


Academic Medicine | 2014

Huddle-coaching: a dynamic intervention for trainees and staff to support team-based care.

Rebecca Shunk; Maya Dulay; Calvin L. Chou; Susan L. Janson; Bridget C. O’Brien

Many outpatient clinics where health professionals train will transition to a team-based medical home model over the next several years. Therefore, training programs need innovative approaches to prepare and incorporate trainees into team-based delivery systems. To address this need, educators at the San Francisco Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center included trainees in preclinic team “huddles,” or briefing meetings to facilitate care coordination, and developed an interprofessional huddle-coaching program for nurse practitioner students and internal medicine residents who function as primary providers for patient panels in VA outpatient primary care clinics. The program aimed to support trainees’ partnerships with staff and full participation in the VA’s Patient Aligned Care Teams. The huddle-coaching program focuses on structuring the huddle process via scheduling, checklists, and designated huddle coaches; building relationships among team members through team-building activities; and teaching core skills to support collaborative practice. A multifaceted evaluation of the program showed positive results. Participants rated training sessions and team-building activities favorably. In interviews, trainees valued their team members and identified improvements in efficiency and quality of patient care as a result of the team-based approach. Huddle checklists and scores on the Team Development Measure indicated progress in team processes and relationships as the year progressed. These findings suggest that the huddle-coaching program was a worthwhile investment in trainee development that also supported the clinic’s larger mission to deliver team-based, patient-aligned care. As more training sites shift to team-based care, the huddle-coaching program offers a strategy for successfully incorporating trainees.


Teaching and Learning in Medicine | 2016

Does Research Training During Residency Promote Scholarship and Influence Career Choice? A Cross-Sectional Analysis of a 10-Year Cohort of the UCSF–PRIME Internal Medicine Residency Program

Jeffrey Kohlwes; Bridget O'Brien; Marion Stanley; Ross Grant; Rebecca Shunk; Denise M. Connor; Patricia Cornett; Harry Hollander

ABSTRACT Problem: The Association of Program Directors in Internal Medicine, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine, and the Carnegie Foundation report on medical education recommend creating individualized learning pathways during medical training so that learners can experience broader professional roles beyond patient care. Little data exist to support the success of these specialized pathways in graduate medical education. Intervention: We present the 10-year experience of the Primary Care Medicine Education (PRIME) track, a clinical-outcomes research pathway for internal medicine residents at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF). We hypothesized that participation in an individualized learning track, PRIME, would lead to a greater likelihood of publishing research from residency and accessing adequate career mentorship and would be influential on subsequent alumni careers. Context: We performed a cross-sectional survey of internal medicine residency alumni from UCSF who graduated in 2001 through 2010. We compared responses of PRIME and non-PRIME categorical alumni. We used Pearsons chi-square and Students t test to compare PRIME and non-PRIME alumni on categorical and continuous variables. Outcome: Sixty-six percent (211/319) of alumni responded to the survey. A higher percentage of PRIME alumni published residency research projects compared to non-PRIME alumni (64% vs. 40%; p = .002). The number of PRIME alumni identifying research as their primary career role was not significantly different from non-PRIME internal medicine residency graduates (35% of PRIME vs. 29% non-PRIME). Process measures that could explain these findings include adequate access to mentors (M 4.4 for PRIME vs. 3.6 for non-PRIME alumni, p < .001, on a 5-point Likert scale) and agreeing that mentoring relationships affected career choice (M 4.2 for PRIME vs. 3.7 for categorical alumni, p = .001). Finally, 63% of PRIME alumni agreed that their research experience during residency influenced their subsequent career choice versus 46% of non-PRIME alumni (p = .023). Lessons Learned: Our results support the concept that providing residents with an individualized learning pathway focusing on clinical outcomes research during residency enables them to successfully publish manuscripts and access mentorship, and may influence subsequent career choice. Implementation of individualized residency program tracks that nurture academic interests along with clinical skills can support career development within medicine residency programs.


Medical Teacher | 2017

Twelve tips for delivering successful interprofessional case conferences

Bridget C. O’Brien; Shalini R. Patel; Meg Pearson; Abigail Eastburn; Gillian Earnest; Anna Strewler; Krista Gager; Jennifer K. Manuel; Maya Dulay; Melissa R. Bachhuber; Rebecca Shunk

Abstract Interprofessional case conferences (ICCs) offer an interactive, practical way to engage members of two or more health professions in discussions that involve learning and working together to improve patient care. Well-orchestrated ICCs provide opportunities to integrate interprofessional (IP) education into routine clinical practice. The authors provide 12 tips to support the conceptualization, planning, implementation, facilitation, evaluation, and sustainability of ICCs. They draw from extensive experience as IP educators and facilitators of ICCs and from literature on IP education, case-based learning, small-group facilitation, peer-assisted learning, and learner engagement – all of which offer insights into ICCs but have not been integrated and applied to this context.


Medical Education | 2005

An electrocardiogram curriculum for resident doctors.

R Jeffery Kohlwes; Rebecca Shunk

focused on building skills in the management of chronic disease. It consisted of a weekly, hour-long, interactive workshop followed by an interdisciplinary clinic, during which trainees cared for patients with chronic illnesses. Each 2-month block focused on 1 of 3 chronic conditions: emphysema and asthma, depression and pain, and atrial fibrillation and anticoagulation. Specific objectives for the trainees included:


Journal of Graduate Medical Education | 2010

Using the American Board of Internal Medicine Practice Improvement Modules to Teach Internal Medicine Residents Practice Improvement

Rebecca Shunk; Maya Dulay; Kathy Julian; Patricia Cornett; Jeffrey Kohlwes; Laura Tarter; Harry Hollander; Bridget O'Brien; Patricia O'Sullivan


Journal of Graduate Medical Education | 2011

Developing Educators, Investigators, and Leaders During Internal Medicine Residency: The Area of Distinction Program

R. Jeffrey Kohlwes; Patricia Cornett; Madhavi Dandu; Katherine A. Julian; Arpana R. Vidyarthi; Tracy Minichiello; Rebecca Shunk; Sharad Jain; Elizabeth Harleman; Sumant R Ranji; Brad Sharpe; Patricia O'Sullivan; Harry Hollander


Families, Systems, & Health | 2015

Panel management, team culture, and worklife experience.

Rachel Willard-Grace; Kate Dubé; Danielle Hessler; Bridget O'Brien; Gillian Earnest; Reena Gupta; Rebecca Shunk; Kevin Grumbach


Journal of Interprofessional Education and Practice | 2017

Translating innovation: Exploring dissemination of a unique case conference

India C. King; Anna Strewler; Joyce E. Wipf; Mamta Singh; Elizabeth Painter; Rebecca Shunk; Rebecca S. Brienza; Rick Tivis; William G. Weppner; Michelle Davidson; Janet Willis; Timothy Gordon; C. Scott Smith


Academic Medicine | 2000

A cardiac physical examination curriculum.

Rebecca Shunk

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Maya Dulay

University of California

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Anna Strewler

University of California

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Gillian Earnest

San Francisco VA Medical Center

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Kate Dubé

University of California

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