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University of South Carolina    
2017-2018 School of Medicine Bulletin (Archived) 
    
 
  Mar 29, 2024
 
2017-2018 School of Medicine Bulletin (Archived) [Archived Catalog]

GMED G611 - Integrated Practice of Medicine IV


Credits: 4

The second half of the M2 IPM course: The Integrated Practice of Medicine is a multi-year module that prepares students for the multi-faceted aspects of clinical medicine including application of basic science knowledge, clinical proficiency in physical diagnosis, diagnostic testing and fundamental  therapeutic  procedures , patient interactions, population health, effective communication skills, behavioral and social considerations, team-based health care delivery, ethical issues, professionalism, life-long learning, research and evidence-based practice. The Integrated Practice of Medicine-2 (IPM-2) Module is presented in a “Case of the Week” format, and provides an introduction to history taking, physical examination  skills, clinical reasoning, and patient-centered care including cost effective knowledge of appropriate diagnostic studies and fundamental therapeutic procedures.  The structure of this module focuses on a team-based approach to clinical problem-solving that includes the application of basic science knowledge and social science concepts to patient care.  Weekly, student teams will focus on a clinical case and identify the problem, formulate hypotheses, and develop a comprehensive approach to the case.  Students will examine the role of psychological, social, behavioral, economic, and environmental factors in the health of individuals and populations.  Through this process, IPM-2 will promote an understanding of patients in their varying contexts: as individuals, in a societal context, within the healthcare delivery system, and as members of a larger population.  The premise of the material is that an understanding of the multifactorial aspects of health and the need to understand patients as individuals is necessary for the provision of high quality, patient-centered care. Throughout the year, students will learn to perform physician examinations understand the role of appropriate diagnostic studies and procedures including fundamental therapeutic procedures.  Students will begin to develop strategies to formulate differential diagnoses and explain the underlying basic science principles that lead to their hypotheses.  Students will practice evidence-based strategies to develop diagnostic, procedural, treatment, follow-up and maintenance plans for each case. 

Note: Restricted to medical students
Pass/Fail/Honors