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Item Examining Visiting Student Evaluation Forms(2023-04-28) Rigueiro, Gabriel; Dammann, Erin; Guillaud, Daniel; Packiasabapathy, Senthil; Mitchell, Sally; Yu, CorinnaBackground: Each medical school has clinical evaluation forms with competencies that align with their institutional and course learning objectives. The differences between evaluation forms and the items being assessed presents a challenge for elective course directors to evaluate and complete forms for visiting students. The aim of this project was to compare common characteristics of visiting student evaluation forms presented to an elective course director on Anesthesiology & Perioperative Medicine (APM) in 2022-2023. Materials & Methods: Each medical school has clinical evaluation forms with competencies that align with their institutional and course learning objectives. The differences between evaluation forms and the items being assessed presents a challenge for elective course directors to evaluate and complete forms for visiting students. The aim of this project was to compare common characteristics of visiting student evaluation forms presented to an elective course director on Anesthesiology & Perioperative Medicine (APM) in 2022-2023. Results: Schools (n=33) included ACGME competencies for communication (94%, 31), professionalism (91%, 30), medical knowledge (79%, 26), practice-based improvement (79%, 26), patient care (76%, 25), and systems-based practice (61%, 20) in their evaluation forms. Clinical reasoning skills included history & physical (82%, 27), assessment & plan (79%, 26), differential diagnosis (64%, 21), and charting/note-taking (61%, 20). Additional categories included inter-professionalism (85%, 28), osteopathic principles and practices (64%, 21), self- awareness/receptiveness to feedback (48%, 16), and procedural skills (42%, 14). Formative and summative comments were requested from 94% (31) of schools. Discussion: While many competencies for visiting medical student evaluation forms align with IU School of Medicine evaluations, some subcategories of ACGME core competencies like charting/note-taking are not assessed in the APM elective. Visiting students do not obtain electronic medical record access due to time-prohibitive training requirements, and thus, do not chart during their rotation. Mock paper records for the preanesthetic evaluation history and physical, intraoperative anesthesia record, and postoperative notes and orders could be created as additional assignments to assess students in this skill. Formative/summative comments may or may not comment on the delivery of patient care. Comments frequently discuss teamwork, work ethic, and medical knowledge which are easily evaluated. The time-pressured environment of the OR can limit student opportunity to perform the preoperative anesthetic evaluation. A differential diagnosis during a preoperative history and physical is challenging on the APM elective because patients present to surgery after diagnostic workup. However, differential diagnoses for perioperative symptoms like tachycardia and hypertension could be assessed through Canvas case log discussions. Students currently share an abbreviated written patient presentation with a learning point. They could include perioperative differential diagnoses and treatment plans and share an article from the literature to demonstrate evidence-based learning with more specific questions about systems-based practice. The perioperative environment provides an excellent opportunity to evaluate students in their interprofessional and communication skills working with surgeons, nurses, technicians, assistants, and other learners. Additional questions could be included in the APM evaluation to capture these relationships more fully. Conclusion: Analyzing visiting student evaluations for competencies and skills provides insight into areas for improvement in the APM elective curriculum and clinical evaluation form.