McKendry R J, Busing N, Dauphinee D W, Brailovsky C A, Boulais A P
Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ont.
CMAJ. 2000 Sep 19;163(6):708-11.
The location of postgraduate medical training is shifting from teaching hospitals in urban centres to community practice in rural and remote settings. We were interested in knowing whether learning, as measured by summative examinations, was comparable between graduates who trained in urban centres and those who trained in remote and rural settings.
Family medicine training programs in Ontario were selected as a model of postgraduate medical training. The results of the 2 summative examinations--the Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Examination (MCCQE) Part II and the College of Family Physicians of Canada (CFPC) certification examination--for graduates of the programs at Ontario's 5 medical schools were compared with the results for graduates of the programs in Sudbury and Thunder Bay from 1994 to 1997. The comparability of these 2 cohorts at entry into training was evaluated using the results of their MCCQE Part I, completed just before the family medicine training.
Between 1994 and 1997, 1013 graduates of family medicine programs (922 at the medical schools and 91 at the remote sites) completed the CFPC certification examination; a subset of 663 completed both the MCCQE Part I and the MCCQE Part II. The MCCQE Part I results for graduates in the remote programs did not differ significantly from those for graduates entering the programs in the medical schools (mean score 531.3 [standard deviation (SD) 69.8] and 521.8 [SD 74.4] respectively, p = 0.33). The MCCQE Part II results did not differ significantly between the 2 groups either (mean score 555.1 [SD 71.7] and 545.0 [SD 76.4] respectively, p = 0.32). Similarly, there were no consistent, significant differences in the results of the CFPC certification examination between the 2 groups.
In this model of postgraduate medical training, learning was comparable between trainees in urban family medicine programs and those in rural, community-based programs. The reasons why this outcome might be unexpected and the limitations on the generalizability of these results are discussed.
研究生医学培训的地点正在从城市中心的教学医院转向农村和偏远地区的社区实践。我们想了解,通过总结性考试衡量的学习情况,在城市中心接受培训的毕业生与在偏远和农村地区接受培训的毕业生之间是否具有可比性。
安大略省的家庭医学培训项目被选为研究生医学培训的一个范例。将安大略省5所医学院校项目毕业生的两次总结性考试结果——加拿大医学委员会资格考试(MCCQE)第二部分和加拿大家庭医生学院(CFPC)认证考试结果,与1994年至1997年萨德伯里和桑德贝项目毕业生的结果进行比较。利用他们在家庭医学培训前完成的MCCQE第一部分的结果,评估这两组学员在开始培训时的可比性。
1994年至1997年期间,1013名家庭医学项目毕业生(医学院校922名,偏远地区91名)完成了CFPC认证考试;663人的子集完成了MCCQE第一部分和MCCQE第二部分。偏远项目毕业生的MCCQE第一部分结果与进入医学院校项目的毕业生结果没有显著差异(平均分数分别为531.3 [标准差(SD)69.8]和521.8 [SD 74.4],p = 0.33)。两组之间的MCCQE第二部分结果也没有显著差异(平均分数分别为555.1 [SD 71.7]和545.0 [SD 76.4],p = 0.32)。同样,两组之间CFPC认证考试结果也没有持续、显著的差异。
在这个研究生医学培训范例中,城市家庭医学项目学员与农村社区项目学员的学习情况具有可比性。讨论了这一结果可能出人意料的原因以及这些结果可推广性的局限性。