Introduction: It's the responsibility of medical educators to train residents to be responsible stewards of finite health care resources. Thus, we developed an interactive morning report curriculum that focuses on high-value care (HVC) decision making using real-world cases. In addition, we developed a novel evaluation tool to assess residents' application of cost-conscious care principles through the use of an HVC scoring algorithm. Methods: For each HVC morning report session, a resident presents a case that they encountered recently. Prior to their presentation, the resident reviews guidelines and meets with a physician with expertise in the field to determine the best practice for the case with regard to what imaging, laboratory studies, procedures, and/or consultations were necessary to arrive at the correct diagnosis and treatment course. The resident presents the case while indicating what they would order based on the information provided. Following the session, an HVC score is determined for each participant by awarding points for appropriate, cost-conscious utilization of resources. Points are deducted for unnecessary overuse of health care services and inappropriate underuse of services. Results: Over the course of the 2014-2015 academic year 34 internal medicine residents participated in at least one HVC Morning Report session. The number of participants reporting that their knowledge of health care costs was poor, dropped from 70% on the precurriculum survey to 29% of the postcurriculum survey. Discussion: The HVC Morning Report Curriculum was successful in improving resident knowledge of HVC and comfort with cost effective decision making. Due to the real-world nature of the cases presented, there was a great deal of variability in the complexity of the cases presented by residents. Future directions might include developing a collection of high-yield cases for increased standardization of the learning.
The story of Robinson Crusoe comes to us in the guise of a first-person narrative based in part on a diary. Successor texts have traditionally adopted the same narrative situation, exploiting it in order to foreground ideas of authorship, textual authority and linguistic dominance. This essay pays particularly close attention to those Robinsonades that have not followed this pattern and have instead opted to omit meta-narration and intradiegetic narrator figures. It considers to what ends this is done in three modern Robinsonades: William Golding’s Lord of the Flies (1954), J. G. Ballard’s Concrete Island (1974), and Michael Dudok de Wit’s animated film The Red Turtle (2016).
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