TY - JOUR
T1 - A National Survey of Undergraduate Clinical Education in Internal Medicine
AU - Pincavage, Amber T.
AU - Fagan, Mark J.
AU - Osman, Nora Y.
AU - Leizman, Debra S.
AU - DeWaay, Deborah
AU - Curren, Camilla
AU - Ismail, Nadia
AU - Szauter, Karen
AU - Kisielewski, Michael
AU - Shaheen, Amy W.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Society of General Internal Medicine.
PY - 2019/5/15
Y1 - 2019/5/15
N2 - Background: In the present milieu of rapid innovation in undergraduate medical education at US medical schools, the current structure and composition of clinical education in Internal Medicine (IM) is not clear. Objective: To describe the current composition of undergraduate clinical education structure in IM. Design: National annual Clerkship Directors in Internal Medicine (CDIM) cross-sectional survey. Participants: One hundred twenty-nine clerkship directors at all Liaison Committee on Medical Education accredited US medical schools with CDIM membership as of September 1, 2017. Main Measures: IM core clerkship and post-core clerkship structure descriptions, including duration, educational models, inpatient experiences, ambulatory experiences, and requirements. Key Results: The survey response rate was 83% (107/129). The majority of schools utilized one core IM clerkship model (67%) and continued to use a traditional block model for a majority of their students (84%). Overall 26% employed a Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship model and 14% employed a shared block model for some students. The mean inpatient duration was 7.0 ± 1.7 weeks (range 3–11 weeks) and 94% of clerkships stipulated that students spend some inpatient time on general medicine. IM-specific ambulatory experiences were not required for students in 65% of IM core clerkship models. Overall 75% of schools did not require an advanced IM clinical experience after the core clerkship; however, 66% of schools reported a high percentage of students (> 40%) electing to take an IM sub-internship. About half of schools (48%) did not require overnight call or night float during the clinical IM sub-internship. Conclusions: Although there are diverse core IM clerkship models, the majority of IM core clerkships are still traditional block models. The mean inpatient duration is 7 weeks and 65% of IM core clerkship models did not require IM-specific ambulatory education.
AB - Background: In the present milieu of rapid innovation in undergraduate medical education at US medical schools, the current structure and composition of clinical education in Internal Medicine (IM) is not clear. Objective: To describe the current composition of undergraduate clinical education structure in IM. Design: National annual Clerkship Directors in Internal Medicine (CDIM) cross-sectional survey. Participants: One hundred twenty-nine clerkship directors at all Liaison Committee on Medical Education accredited US medical schools with CDIM membership as of September 1, 2017. Main Measures: IM core clerkship and post-core clerkship structure descriptions, including duration, educational models, inpatient experiences, ambulatory experiences, and requirements. Key Results: The survey response rate was 83% (107/129). The majority of schools utilized one core IM clerkship model (67%) and continued to use a traditional block model for a majority of their students (84%). Overall 26% employed a Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship model and 14% employed a shared block model for some students. The mean inpatient duration was 7.0 ± 1.7 weeks (range 3–11 weeks) and 94% of clerkships stipulated that students spend some inpatient time on general medicine. IM-specific ambulatory experiences were not required for students in 65% of IM core clerkship models. Overall 75% of schools did not require an advanced IM clinical experience after the core clerkship; however, 66% of schools reported a high percentage of students (> 40%) electing to take an IM sub-internship. About half of schools (48%) did not require overnight call or night float during the clinical IM sub-internship. Conclusions: Although there are diverse core IM clerkship models, the majority of IM core clerkships are still traditional block models. The mean inpatient duration is 7 weeks and 65% of IM core clerkship models did not require IM-specific ambulatory education.
KW - clerkship
KW - internal medicine clerkship
KW - undergraduate medical education
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U2 - 10.1007/s11606-019-04892-0
DO - 10.1007/s11606-019-04892-0
M3 - Article
C2 - 30993614
AN - SCOPUS:85064701402
SN - 0884-8734
VL - 34
SP - 699
EP - 704
JO - Journal of general internal medicine
JF - Journal of general internal medicine
IS - 5
ER -