The formative and summative evaluations of oral and maxillofacial surgery residents have commonly involved the six core competencies of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. Unfortunately, the assessment of a resident's competencies in these six core areas is often subjective such that the written feedback might not be supportive of the resident's learning and continuous professional development. Compounding this problem is that faculty are infrequently trained in providing feedback in these core competencies, thereby adding to the inadequacy of this exercise. Entrustable professional activities (EPAs) represent a unit of professional practice, defined as tasks or responsibilities to be entrusted to the unsupervised execution by a trainee once he or she has attained sufficient specific competence. It is the purpose of this article to review the concept of EPAs that represent a hopeful solution to the theoretical and abstract nature of exclusive competency-based training assessments in resident education. EPAs are specifically proposed for oral and maxillofacial surgery resident education while discussing their serving as a faculty development construct.
Keyphrases
- medical education
- quality improvement
- minimally invasive
- patient safety
- healthcare
- coronary artery bypass
- global health
- surgical site infection
- primary care
- machine learning
- high intensity
- resistance training
- working memory
- public health
- emergency medicine
- medical students
- atrial fibrillation
- quality control
- virtual reality