Hanan Aboumatar, MD MPH
- Director, Armstrong Institute Center for Engagement and Patient-Centered Innovations
- Associate Professor of Medicine
This three-day course occurs in Year Two. Students have completed the Longitudinal Clerkship and are finalizing the Genes to Society sections before Transition to the Wards. The course goals are to introduce the science of safety and quality and to develop knowledge and skills to practice within health care teams. It also promulgates the use of systems thinking in understanding complex health delivery systems and analyzing safety issues. The course is taught by an interdisciplinary group of faculty led by members of the Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality. Activities include lecture, small-group discussions, communications labs, case studies, a defect study investigation and an elderly patient simulation.
By the end of this course, students will be able to:
Grace Bryant, M.Ed.
Medical Training Program Administrator
Email: [email protected]
The course runs for 20 hours over three days.