Acg Self Assessment Patched -

The ACGME didn’t have a Milestone for that. But Maya wrote one in anyway.

Dr. Maya Chen stared at the blinking cursor on her laptop. It was 11:47 p.m. The ACGME Self-Assessment form for her residency program sat half-finished. Six tabs were open: duty hour logs, case logs, survey results, and a PDF of the “Common Program Requirements.” She sighed. This wasn't a story. It was a tax return in medical drag. acg self assessment

He changed their “needs improvement” in Interpersonal Communication Skills to a “commendation” — with a handwritten note: “Because you assessed what matters.” The ACGME form was submitted at 1:13 a.m. Maya closed her laptop. The checklist was complete. But the real self-assessment wasn’t a form. It was Jamie’s voice, now steady, teaching interns: “When a patient asks if they’re a burden, you don’t answer with data. You answer with your presence. That’s the procedure. And it takes practice.” The ACGME didn’t have a Milestone for that

Maya showed him the new monthly “Human Moments” M&M conference — not for medical errors, but for moments where the right answer wasn’t in UpToDate. Residents presented cases like Jamie’s. They role-played difficult conversations. They graded each other not on knot-tying speed, but on the quality of their silences. Maya Chen stared at the blinking cursor on her laptop

But then she remembered the incident — the one that didn't fit into any Milestone checkbox.