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The escalating demand for palliative care physicians has led
to the proliferation of postgraduate fellowship programs to train physicians
in the United States and Canada. There is currently little data regarding
the extent to which clinical, research, educational or administrative skills
and competencies have been incorporated into fellowship training. Researchers
conducted a survey via mail and in person, with e-mail utilized for reminders,
that aimed to describe: (1) fellows' interests and relative priorities for
receiving training in the clinical, educational, research, and administrative
aspects of palliative medicine; (2) quantity of training received in each
area; (3) fellows' satisfaction with the teaching received in each area; (4)
postfellowship employment experiences.
All palliative medicine fellows from the United States and Canada between
1997 and 2002 were surveyed. One hundred one fellows from 24 programs were
identified; contact information was obtained from program directors for 89
fellows (88%). Sixty-seven valid surveys were received for a response rate
of 75%; 22 programs (14 U.S., 8 Canadian, 92% of active fellowships) are represented.
The vast majority of fellows (94%) identified clinical training as very important;
63% identified educational training as important and only few (33% and 21%,
respectively) identified research or administrative training as very important.
Fellows reported receiving less training on research and administrative topics
than they did on clinical or educational topics. Sixty-eight percent of fellows
reported spending 10% or less of their time on research activities, and subsequently
fellows reported low levels of research competence. Fellows were very satisfied
with their clinical training, intermediately satisfied with their educational
training, and less with their research (mean rating = 3.1) and administrative
training (mean rating = 2.24). The largest proportion of fellows (73%) described
their first post fellowship position as "clinician/educator" or
"full time clinician"; only 14% were "clinician/researchers."
The investigators conclude that clinical training appears to be both the
focus and strength of most palliative care fellowships surveyed. Fellows appear
less interested in and express a lower level of satisfaction with their training
in educational, research, and administrative training, and programs appear
to be less focused on these aspects of palliative medicine. The scope of fellowship
programs must broaden to provide fellows opportunities to develop the research,
education, and administrative skills necessary to strengthen the research
base of the field and provide academic leadership for the future. Carmody
S, Meier D, Billings JA, Weissman DE, Arnold RM. Adapted from J Palliat Med.
2005 Oct;8(5):1005-15.
Read more: PMID 16238513
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=16238513&query_hl=32
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