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DOI: 10.1055/s-0045-1813215
Navigating the Competency Revolution in Medical Education
Authors

Abstract
The Flexner Report in 1910 is considered as the first major milestone in medical education, where the quality of graduates and their training was given a priority; it also marked the beginning of a system-based medical education. Since 1910, there has been a slow update of the medical education system components till the recent change to Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME) in the last 10 years. For over 100 years, the system was mainly a time-based system that used time to meet certain goals and objectives, which were not necessarily outcome-based and relied mainly on summative assessments to assess competency. The CBME, with the introduction of entrustable professional activities (EPAs) and milestones, has clearly identified the major competencies that are required for all graduates to meet before graduating, regardless of time; nevertheless, time is still used as a resource to achieve them. The major implementation of CBME started in Canadian and American postgraduate training programs and was later adopted by their medical schools. The concept of CBME brought new ideas to the medical education system, such as more focus on the number and type of learner assessments in different contexts, a more thorough decision-making process through the creation of competence committees, and a shift toward more learner-driven training. The critical link between abstract competencies and clinical practice is provided by EPAs, which are specific, professional tasks that a trainee can be fully entrusted to perform unsupervised after demonstrating the necessary competence. National frameworks, such as the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) Core EPAs, have been developed to standardize this approach and prepare graduates for residency. Despite the benefits, implementing CBME and EPAs faces several challenges. These include faculty resistance and resource intensity, as well as the risk of “assessment fatigue” and “conceptual dilution,” where the term EPA is misapplied. The current and future direction of medical education will mainly focus on overcoming these issues through focused faculty development, optimized assessment systems, and a commitment to standardized definitions, all of which are essential to fully realize the potential of CBME in producing competent, practice-ready physicians. In addition, the medical education society will continue to develop and work on fully implementing the concept of master adaptive learners.
Keywords
CBME - competency-based education - entrustable professional activities - EPA - medical educationDeclaration of use of AI in the writing process
In preparing this manuscript, Gemini was utilized to enhance article structure, summarize and synthesize existing literature, and improve the clarity, conciseness, and grammatical correctness of the writing. Following the application of AI, the authors conducted a thorough review and editing process, assuming full responsibility for the final content. Recognizing the potential for AI to generate incorrect, incomplete, or biased information, the manuscript underwent rigorous human revision and judgment. Consistent with Elsevier's Authorship Policy, no AI or AI-assisted technologies have been designated as authors or co-authors, as the inherent responsibilities of authorship are exclusively human.
Publication History
Received: 21 August 2025
Accepted: 07 October 2025
Article published online:
26 November 2025
© 2025. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, permitting unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction so long as the original work is properly cited. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
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