In “Describing Failure in a Clinical Clerkship,” Nixon et al.1 examined competency deficiencies of 43 students who failed the internal medicine clerkship at the University of Minnesota School of Medicine. The authors categorized deficiencies using the domains of the Physician Competencies Reference Set2 designed by the American Association of Medical Colleges, which included medical knowledge, patient care, practice-based learning and improving, interpersonal and communication skills, professionalism, systems-based practice, inter-professional collaboration, and personal-professional development. Surveys of residency program directors3 frequently cite organization and efficiency as concerning deficiencies in residents, while this topic is largely overlooked in medical students. There is a perception that because medical students are just learning how to assess patients that organization and efficiency are skills that will just be obtained with more experience. The organization and efficiency categories rarely become an explicitly stated competency, and very few papers detail a focus on efforts to remediate within this domain. We propose that the missing links that tie together most of the attributes of learners failing internal medicine clerkships are actually organization and efficiency.

Coaching a learner through organization and efficiency allows the learner to apply knowledge and skills through a practical framework of what he/she should be doing minute-to-minute as they work up a new patient admission within the time constraints of patient care while applying aspects of other domains. Organization and efficiency deficiencies can significantly cloud the evaluator’s assessment because when not addressed, they prevent showcasing of progress in other coached domains. We feel that organization and efficiency are at the root of nearly all deficiencies listed by Nixon et al. including: incomplete differential diagnosis, poor patient presentation skills, inadequate synthesis and application of knowledge, examination failure, inability to manage expected patient volume, poor communication with the team, delayed response to pages, and being late. If students do not approach patient care with a step-by-step organized framework and prioritization skills, they are less likely to deliver a poised and confident delivery of a clinical assessment leading to frustration from preceptors and perhaps inaccurate assessment of deficiencies in the other domains.

The lack of emphasis on organization and efficiency in the competency guideline creation process and in prior coaching literature plays a major role in the critical evaluation of remediation programs to help struggling medical students, especially for those who have not improved with coaching in other domains.