Schwarz M Roy
China Medical Board of New York, NY 10017, USA.
Med Teach. 2004 May;26(3):211-4. doi: 10.1080/01421590410001696416.
The Washington, Alaska, Montana and Idaho (WAMI) Program is a four-state decentralized medical education program initiated at the University of Washington School of Medicine (UWSM) in 1972 with the goals of: (1) admitting more students to medical school from all states, (2) training more primary care physicians, (3) bringing the UWSM's resources to needy communities, (4) redressing the maldistribution of physicians by placing more MDs in predominantly rural states and (5) avoiding new construction costs. The program consists of a University Phase and a Community Phase, the latter extending to residency/postgraduate medical training. Thirty-three years on, and now renamed WWAMI (with the inclusion of the State of Wyoming), nearly 1200 students have been admitted to the program, with 5947 clerkship experiences and 2282 resident rotations, and the original goals of this experiment in decentralized medical education have been largely met. Almost half of all residents supported by the program return home to practice, and of graduates who underwent a part of their training in Alaska, Montana and Idaho, 64.7% returned home to practice. This paper reports on some lessons learned and speculates whether the WAMI program can keep pace with the rapid changes in medical education.
华盛顿、阿拉斯加、蒙大拿和爱达荷(WAMI)项目是一项始于1972年的、覆盖四个州的分散式医学教育项目,由华盛顿大学医学院(UWSM)发起,其目标包括:(1)从所有州招收更多学生进入医学院;(2)培养更多的初级保健医生;(3)将UWSM的资源引入贫困社区;(4)通过在主要为农村的州安置更多医学博士来纠正医生分布不均的状况;(5)避免新的建设成本。该项目包括大学阶段和社区阶段,后者延伸至住院医师/毕业后医学培训。33年后,该项目现更名为WWAMI(加入了怀俄明州),已有近1200名学生被该项目录取,有5947次临床实习经历和2282次住院医师轮转,分散式医学教育这一实验的最初目标已基本实现。该项目资助的所有住院医师中,近一半回到家乡执业,在阿拉斯加、蒙大拿和爱达荷接受部分培训的毕业生中,64.7%回到家乡执业。本文报告了一些经验教训,并推测WAMI项目能否跟上医学教育的快速变化。