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Donald W. Reynolds Center on Aging

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Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatrics
Medical Student Education

The Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatrics is vigorously committed to educating medical students in the unique skills required in the care of older persons. All medical students at UAMS must complete a mandatory Geriatrics Clerkship during their junior year of medical school. The goal of the Geriatrics Clerkship is two-fold: To assist the student in developing a knowledge base in Geriatric Medicine with an emphasis on common geriatric syndromes and diseases as well as the normal aging process and to introduce the student to the interdisciplinary approach of comprehensive assessment, management, and prevention techniques in the elderly. This four-week course exposes students to elderly patients in four of five different care settings: primary care outpatient clinics, transitional care unit, inpatient service, nursing homes, and hospice. By arranging the clerkship in this manner, students are introduced to the continuum of care for elderly patients and the resources associated with each area. In addition, students attend both weekly didactic sessions and Geriatric Grand Rounds.

Students attend ambulatory clinics, either at the UAMS Senior Health Center or the North Little Rock VA Primary Care Geriatric Clinic. In each of these settings, students see a wide variety of elderly patients with multiple chronic diseases and geriatric syndromes. Students spend six half-days per week in this setting where their skills are honed to perform specialized exams for elderly patients. The clinic experience plays a vital role in teaching students the importance of health promotion and appropriate disease prevention.

In addition, students spend six half-days per week in either the Transitional Care Unit (TCU) at the North Little Rock VA or the Geriatric Inpatient Service at the University Hospital. In the TCU setting, students observe common rehabilitative and restorative techniques used with elderly patients. In the inpatient setting, students become familiar with the atypical presentation of diseases in the elderly and treat the acute exacerbations of chronic disease for which elderly patients are frequently hospitalized.

The third experience provides students with one half-day per week in a nursing home. In the nursing home, the issues of frailty, loss of independence and privacy, polypharmacy, chronic pain, and end-of-life decision making are addressed as well as the importance of non-physician healthcare providers to overall patient care.

The fourth experience consists of one half-day per week in hospice care. This combines home visits to terminally ill patients and didactic sessions that focus on symptom relief and the importance of interdisciplinary healthcare teams.

At the end of the rotation, students take an Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE). This takes place in the state-of-the-art Clinical Skills Center at UAMS. The students interview and / or examine three standardized patients representing typical geriatric syndromes or problems. Trained observers, via unobtrusive video cameras, score the students. Each standardized patient encounter is followed by a computerized Post-Encounter examination consisting of five multiple-choice questions relating back to the patient case.



Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatrics

Copyright © 2003
Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatrics

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
4301 W. Markham Slot 748
Little Rock, AR 72205
(501) 296-1000
(877) SR YEARS (779-3277)
geriatrics@uams.edu
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