Our Clinic-Outpatient Practice
The ambulatory clinic experience based at Providence Medical Group-Northeast
plays a central role in the residents’ educational and clinical
experiences. The clinic is a combined faculty and resident practice. Both
the faculty and the residents have their own individual patient panels
for which they have primary responsibility. We are certified as a tier
3 patient-centered medical home. As we originally formed as a mission
clinic for the Providence system, our patient population is a fascinating
mix of diverse ethnic and social backgrounds. Here are some highlights:
- As a patient-centered medical home, we embrace the multi-disciplinary team.
Our resources include a behavioral psychologist, clinical pharmacist,
social work case manager, nurse case manager, clinic nurses, dietitian
and physical therapist.
- Residents work on a clinic team including general medicine faculty, medical
assistants and clinical care coordinators to care for their patients.
Residents enjoy working closely with clinic staff and feel that it trains
them well for future practice in how to optimize their relationship with
their support staff to best care for patients.
- We strive to provide continuity and quality care with our team approach.
Team members learn to cover for each other as a group practice. Residents
learn skills in cross-coverage and interpersonal communication.
- Some residents opt to do a “shared practice” or “collaborative
continuity” experience with a faculty member. In this model, residents
see their faculty’s patients and are provided with one-on-one mentoring.
This has been a valuable and popular experience for the residents. Residents
feel that this balances well with their own continuity experience.
- Ambulatory clinic takes place during 2-week Integrated Blocks, with 8-9
half-days of clinic over a 2 week period. The more concentrated clinic
experience allows residents to immerse in the ambulatory learning environment.
- Residents meet with the multidisciplinary team during Integrated blocks
to discuss complex patients from their panel and develop team care plans
to optimize care.
- Disease registries have been incorporated into the electronic medical record
and assist residents in learning panel management skills. Time is incorporated
into the curriculum for faculty-led sessions on population health/panel
management. There is a disease management support team that helps with
reminders and calls to patients when they are due for an evidence-based service.
- All interns experience the Introduction to Outpatient Medicine rotation
at the beginning of internship. This rotation is essentially an outpatient
"boot camp" which allows interns to rapidly learn about the
outpatient setting and creates an optimal continuity clinic experience.