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University of New Mexico
School of Medicine
Office of Admissions
Health Sciences Library & Informatics Center
Room #125
MSC09 5085
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001 Phone: (505) 272-4766
Fax: (505) 925-6031
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Technical Standards
Applicants for admission to The University of New
Mexico School of Medicine and current students must possess the
capability to complete the entire medical curriculum, achieve the degree
Doctor of Medicine, and practice medicine with or without
accommodation. The University recognizes that otherwise qualified
candidates for the MD degree may be able to meet the technical standards
described in this document if provided reasonable accommodation. It
should be noted however that the use of a trained intermediary is not
acceptable in situations where the candidate’s judgment is impacted by
the intermediary’s powers of selection and observation. Thus, the use of
personal aids, assistants, care-givers, readers, and interpreters may
not be appropriate, particularly in clinical education settings.
Students must also be aware that approval for and the provision of
reasonable accommodations at UNM –SOM does not mean that similar
accommodations would be granted elsewhere or by national licensing
review boards.
In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA), The University of New Mexico School of Medicine will implement policy and
procedures to ensure equal access to educational opportunities for persons with
disabilities. Because graduates of medical school must be prepared to assume
care for patients in a wide variety of clinical disciplines the education for
the MD degree is, of necessity, broad in nature. An avowed intention to
practice only a narrow part of the curriculum does not alter the requirement
that all students take the full curriculum.
TECHNICAL STANDARDS REQUIRED TO PERFORM THE ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS OF THE
MEDICAL SCHOOL CURRICULUM
The medical
curriculum requires demonstrated proficiency in a variety of cognitive, problem-
solving, manipulative, communicative, and interpersonal skills. To achieve
these proficiencies, the School of Medicine requires that each student be able
to meet the following Technical Standards.
- Observation: Through independent observation the
student must be able to acquire information in the basic medical sciences,
including that obtained from demonstrations and experiential activities. The
student must also be able to observe and accurately acquire information
directly from the patient as well as from other sources including written
documents, images, slides, videos, and films. This level of observation and
information acquisition requires the functional use of vision, hearing, and
somatic sensation.
- Communication: Students must be able to
effectively speak, hear, read and write in a tutorial, classroom, and
assessment setting. Student must be able to speak, hear and observe patients
in a clinical setting. A student must be able to record information accurately
and clearly, fluently speak and write English, and communicate effectively and
in a sensitive manner with patients. A student must also be able to
communicate effectively with members of the healthcare team in oral and
written form and in patient care settings where clinical decisions may depend
on rapid communication.
- Motor Coordination: Students must be able to elicit
information independently from patients by palpation, auscultation, percussion,
and other diagnostic maneuvers. Students should be able to respond to emergency
situations in a timely manner and provide or direct general emergency care such
as airway management, CPR, placement of intravenous catheters, simple wound
repair, and basic obstetrical procedures. Such activities require sufficient
physical mobility coordination of both gross and fine motor neuromuscular
function, functional use of the sense of touch, vision, hearing, and balance and
equilibrium.
- Intellect: Students must be able to identify,
define, and solve problems in a timely and effective manner. This critical
skill demanded of physicians requires the ability to work effectively with
measurements and calculations, to learn and reason in a variety of settings
including formal lectures, small group discussions, individual teaching
sessions, clinical teaching sessions and independent learning activities, to
self-evaluate, and to integrate, analyze, and synthesize data concurrently in
a multi-task setting. In addition, the students must be able to comprehend
three-dimensional relationships and to understand the spatial relationships of
structures.
- Behavioral and Social Attributes: Students must
possess the emotional health and the self-discipline required for full use of
their intellectual abilities, the exercise of good judgment, and the timely
and safe completion of all tasks and responsibilities. They must be able to
adapt to rapid change, to display flexibility and learn to function in the
face of stressful situations and uncertainties. Students must consistently
demonstrate honesty, integrity, altruism, empathy, and concern for patients,
their families, colleagues, members of the healthcare team and the community
at large.
The determination of whether an applicant or current
student meets the above standards will be done on an individual, case by case
basis utilizing the existing committee structure of the School of Medicine.
(i.e. Committee on Admissions, Advisory Committee on Students with Disabilities,
Committee on Student Promotions and Evaluations I and II [CSPE I, CSPE II],
Educational Council).
NOTE: “Technical standards” shall mean those minimum standards
for physicians that must be examined and enforced in the admissions process and
in the determination whether an M.D. degree may be awarded.
Approved by UNM Education
Council August 2004
Approved by UNM Counsel
September 2004
Approved at UNM Faculty
Meeting October 2004 |