scispace - formally typeset
H

H. Carrie Chen

Researcher at Georgetown University

Publications -  32
Citations -  1369

H. Carrie Chen is an academic researcher from Georgetown University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Curriculum & Health care. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 29 publications receiving 996 citations. Previous affiliations of H. Carrie Chen include University of California, San Francisco & University of California, Berkeley.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The case for use of entrustable professional activities in undergraduate medical education.

TL;DR: Arguments in favor of the use of EPAs in UME are discussed, and it is suggested that EPAs could be operationalized for UME if UME-specific EPAs were developed and the entrustment scale were expanded.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence-based medicine training in undergraduate medical education: a review and critique of the literature published 2006-2011.

TL;DR: Settings, learner levels and instructors, teaching methods, and covered skills differed across interventions, and authors writing about EBM interventions should include detailed descriptions and employ more rigorous research methods to allow others to draw conclusions about efficacy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Twelve tips for the implementation of EPAs for assessment and entrustment decisions.

TL;DR: Practical recommendations for how to implement EPAs for assessment and entrustment decisions in the workplace and tips for supervising clinicians and curriculum leaders on enabling the trust development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing Trainees and Making Entrustment Decisions: On the Nature and Use of Entrustment-Supervision Scales

TL;DR: The authors aim to increase understanding about the nature, purpose, and practice of supervision scales aimed at entrustment, as well as the program, context, and specialty specificity of scales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scoping Review of Entrustable Professional Activities in Undergraduate Medical Education.

TL;DR: Reproducibility did not appear to be a strength of EPAs in UME; however, reproducibility, equivalence, educational effect, and catalytic effect all require further study.