Entrustable Professional Activities

LG7: Acute care

Learning Goal 7

Acute care

Manage those who are acutely unwell and stabilise haemodynamic compromise

This activity requires the ability to:

  • assess seriously unwell patients, and initiate management
  • recognise clinical deterioration, and respond by following the local process for escalation of care
  • recognise and manage acutely unwell patients who require resuscitation (primarily in inpatient settings) and provide advanced life support
  • liaise with transport services and medical teams

Professional practice framework domain

Medical expertise

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • recognise immediate life-threatening conditions and deteriorating and critically unwell patients, and respond appropriately
  • perform advanced life support according to resuscitation council guidelines
  • lead a medical emergency / rapid response team
  • explain potential risks and complications of resuscitation
  • assess, diagnose, and manage acute undifferentiated clinical presentations
  • select investigations that ensure maximum patient safety through excluding or diagnosing critical patient issues
  • discuss goals of care, limitations, or escalation of treatment with patients and families
  • systematically identify causes of acute deterioration in health status and levels of physical and cognitive functioning
  • formulate complete and reasoned problem lists
  • manage escalations or transitions of care in a proactive and timely manner
  • initiate empirical therapy aimed at stabilising patients and avoiding irreversible organ failure pending definitive diagnosis
  • formulate management plans that recognise treatment interactions with multisystem diseases and comorbidities
  • create contingency plans when initial management plans do not provide the expected outcome
  • develop management plans that are based on medical assessment of clinical condition and multidisciplinary assessment of functional capacity
  • provide clear and effective discharge summaries with recommendations for ongoing care
  • optimise medical management perioperatively

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • recognise seriously unwell patients requiring immediate care
  • apply basic life support as indicated
  • recognise general medical principles of caring for patients with undifferentiated and undiagnosed conditions
  • identify potential causes of current deterioration, and comply with escalation protocols
  • facilitate initial tests to assist in diagnosis, and develop management plans for immediate treatment
  • document information to outline the rationale for clinical decisions and action plans
  • assess perioperative and periprocedural patients

Communication

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • communicate clearly and in a timely manner with other team members, and coordinate efforts of multidisciplinary team members
  • communicate with emergency medical staff and colleagues to optimise continuity of patient care and explore alternatives to hospitalisation
  • use closed-loop, clear communication with other healthcare team members during resuscitation
  • document sufficient information to outline rationale for clinical decisions and management plans
  • facilitate early communication with patients, families, and healthcare team members to allow shared decision making
  • negotiate realistic treatment goals, and determine and explain the expected prognoses and outcomes
  • employ communication strategies appropriate for younger patients or those with cognitive difficulties
  • explain the situation to patients in a sensitive and supportive manner, avoiding jargon and confirming their understanding
  • determine the level of health literacy of individual patients, and their level of understanding of agreed care decisions
  • clearly and succinctly perform handover to the next treating team
  • communicate requirements for nursing care, including frequency of observations and the time of the next planned review

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • demonstrate communication skills to sufficiently support the function of multidisciplinary teams
  • determine patients’ understanding of their diseases and what they perceive as the most desirable goals of care

Quality and safety

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • maintain up-to-date certification in advanced life support
  • use clinical information technology systems for conducting prospective and retrospective clinical audits
  • evaluate and explain the benefits and risks of clinical interventions based on individual patients’ circumstances
  • analyse adverse incidents and sentinel events to identify system failures and contributing factors
  • identify evidence-based practice gaps using clinical indicators, and implement changes to improve patients’ outcomes
  • coordinate and encourage innovation, and objectively evaluate improvement initiatives for outcomes and sustainability

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • evaluate the quality of processes through well-designed audits
  • recognise the risks and benefits of operative interventions
  • raise appropriate issues for review at morbidity and mortality meetings
  • evaluate the quality and safety processes implemented within the workplace, and identify gaps in their structure

Teaching and learning

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • demonstrate effective supervision skills and teaching methods adapted to the context of the training
  • coordinate and supervise junior staff
  • encourage questioning among junior colleagues and students in response to unanswered clinical questions
  • seek guidance and feedback from healthcare teams to reflect on encounters and improve future patients’ care

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • mentor and train others to enhance team effectiveness
  • provide constructive feedback to junior colleagues to contribute to improvements in individuals’ skills
  • coordinate and supervise junior colleagues from the emergency department and wards

Research

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • select studies based on optimal trial design, freedom from bias, and precision of measurement
  • evaluate the value of treatments in terms of relative and absolute benefits, cost, potential patient harm, and feasibility
  • evaluate the applicability of the results of clinical studies to the circumstances of individual patients, especially those with multiple comorbidities
  • specify research evidence to the needs of individual patients

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • demonstrate efficient searching of literature databases to retrieve evidence
  • use information from credible sources to aid in decision making
  • refer to evidence-based clinical guidelines and protocols on acutely unwell patients
  • demonstrate awareness of the limitations of the evidence and the challenges of applying research in daily practice

Cultural safety

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • negotiate care decisions in a culturally appropriate way by considering variation in worldview, family structures, cultures, religion, or belief systems
  • consider cultural, ethical, and religious values and beliefs in leading multidisciplinary teams
  • integrate culturally appropriate models of care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, Māori, and Pacific peoples into clinical practice
  • respectfully acknowledge culturally appropriate cares that may be received in parallel, such as mirimiri

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • practise cultural competency appropriate for the community serviced
  • proactively identify barriers to healthcare access

Ethics and professional behaviour

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • develop management plans based on medical assessments of the clinical conditions and multidisciplinary assessments of functional capacity
  • advise patients of their rights to refuse medical therapy, including life-sustaining treatment
  • consider the consequences of delivering treatment that is deemed futile, directing to other care as appropriate
  • facilitate interactions within multidisciplinary teams, respecting values, encouraging involvement, and engaging all participants in decision making
  • demonstrate critical reflection on personal beliefs and attitudes, including how these may affect patient care and health care policy

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • communicate medical management plans as part of multidisciplinary plans
  • establish, where possible, patients’ wishes and preferences about care
  • contribute to building a productive culture within teams

Judgement and decision making

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • initiate appropriate bed management decisions
  • identify patients whose clinical acuity and complexity mandate inpatient management
  • identify patients whose clinical acuity requires intensive supervision in a relevant unit, such as the high dependency unit, intensive care unit, or coronary care unit
  • apply selection criteria in identifying patients presenting acutely who are candidates for admission to medical assessment and planning units
  • recognise when a ‘watch and wait’ approach is justified
  • recognise the need for escalation of care, and escalate to appropriate staff or services
  • select and appropriately refer patients eligible for invasive intervention during acute or subacute phases of illness
  • adjust approach depending on needs of the current patient, others needing acute assessment, and staff and hospital resources
  • integrate evidence related to questions of diagnosis, therapy, prognosis, risks, and cause into clinical decision making
  • reconcile conflicting advice from other specialties, applying judgement in making clinical decisions in the presence of uncertainty
  • use care pathways effectively, including identifying reasons for variations in care

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • involve additional staff to assist in a timely fashion when required
  • recognise personal limitations and seek help in an appropriate way when required

Leadership, management, and teamwork

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • work collaboratively with staff in the emergency department, intensive care, and other subspecialty inpatient units
  • demonstrate timely multidisciplinary team engagement and community care delivery with clear leadership and management plan development
  • delegate routine tasks to others while assessing and managing patients of higher acuity
  • manage the transition of acute medical patients through their hospital journeys
  • lead a team by providing engagement while maintaining a focus on outcomes

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • collaborate with and engage other team members, based on their roles and skills
  • ensure appropriate multidisciplinary assessment and management
  • encourage an environment of openness and respect to lead effective teams

Health policy, systems, and advocacy

confident
Ready to perform without supervision

Expected behaviours of a trainee who can routinely perform this activity without needing supervision

The trainee will:

  • use a considered and rational approach to the responsible use of resources, balancing costs against outcomes
  • prioritise patients’ care based on need, and consider available healthcare resources
  • collaborate with emergency medicine staff and other colleagues to develop policies and protocols for the investigation and management of common acute medical problems
  • ensure acute care is provided in a timely fashion to disadvantaged and vulnerable patient groups through advocacy and health service development
  • identify equity determinants as they pertain to acute care, and devise strategies to address them
  • be familiar with institutional support frameworks and options when advocating for patients or disadvantaged populations

direction
Requires some supervision

Possible behaviours of a trainee who needs some supervision to perform this activity

The trainee may:

  • recognise the systems for the escalation of care for deteriorating patients
  • demonstrate awareness of the role of clinician leadership and advocacy in appraising and redesigning systems of care that lead to better patient outcomes