Peterson Christine M, Gerstle Ronald, Bhalla Sanjeev, Menias Christine O, Jost R Gilbert
Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, 660 South Euclid Avenue, Campus Box 8131, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Acad Radiol. 2005 Mar;12(3):373-8. doi: 10.1016/j.acra.2004.12.014.
Every year, the American Association of Academic Chief Residents in Radiology (A3CR2) conducts a survey of the chief residents in accredited radiology programs in the United States and Canada. The purpose of the survey is to evaluate current residents' opinions regarding a number of different issues pertaining to their educational experience, work responsibilities, and benefits. This information is useful in monitoring patterns of change in resident attitudes toward their experiences within their residency training programs.
Online surveys were made available to the chief residents from 193 training programs in North America. For the most part, the questions were presented in a multiple-choice format, with additional space for elaboration or comments provided for many of the items. Some questions are repeated annually, addressing general topics such as salary and hospital size. However, new questions are incorporated each year. In particular, this year's survey included questions pertaining to Armed Forces Institute of Pathology course funding, and advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) /basic life support certification and changes in duty work hour and call requirements in the face of changing ACGME (Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education) regulations.
The results of the survey were then tabulated, and responses to several of the repeated questions were compared with those from prior surveys dating back to 1996. This year's response rate was 55%, with 106 unique responses received. This represents an improvement since last year's survey, when the response rate was 41%. In some cases, more than one response was generated by a given residency program, in which case the questionnaire that was more thoroughly completed was used for statistical analysis. Responses were received from chief residents in 37 states and in Canada. The largest number of respondents was from New York, and 80% percent of respondents were from programs affiliated with a university. Forty-two percent were incoming chief residents with less than 3 months' experience, whereas 58% were outgoing chief residents with less than 9 months remaining in their tenure.
The majority of respondents report that changes made by their respective programs as the result of new ACGME maximum duty hour standards have been viewed favorably by radiology residents. Many training programs have moved toward a night float based call system in order to maintain compliance. Nearly all programs have overnight in-house radiology resident coverage, but there has been a slight decline in the percentage of programs that provide in-house attending coverage at night. The majority of residents, however, have access to attendings after-hours by pager. Finally, resident salaries and benefits continue to increase, as has been the trend over the past several years.
美国放射学住院总医师协会(A3CR2)每年都会对美国和加拿大经认可的放射学项目中的住院总医师进行一项调查。该调查的目的是评估当前住院医师对与他们的教育经历、工作职责和福利相关的一些不同问题的看法。这些信息有助于监测住院医师对其住院医师培训项目经历的态度变化模式。
向北美193个培训项目的住院总医师提供在线调查问卷。在大多数情况下,问题以多项选择题的形式呈现,许多项目还提供了详细阐述或评论的额外空间。一些问题每年重复提出,涉及薪资和医院规模等一般主题。然而,每年都会纳入新问题。特别是,今年的调查包括与武装部队病理研究所课程资金、高级心脏生命支持(ACLS)/基础生命支持认证以及面对毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)规定变化时值班工作时间和呼叫要求变化相关的问题。
然后将调查结果制成表格,并将对几个重复问题的回答与1996年以来的先前调查结果进行比较。今年的回复率为55%,共收到106份有效回复。这比去年的调查有所改善,去年的回复率为41%。在某些情况下,一个给定的住院医师培训项目会产生多个回复,在这种情况下,用于统计分析的是填写更完整的问卷。收到了来自37个州和加拿大的住院总医师的回复。回复者最多的是纽约,80%的回复者来自与大学相关的项目。42%是经验不足3个月的新任住院总医师,而58%是任期还剩不到9个月的即将离任的住院总医师。
大多数回复者报告说,放射学住院医师对各自项目因新的ACGME最长值班时间标准而做出的改变持积极看法。许多培训项目已转向基于夜间轮值的呼叫系统以保持合规。几乎所有项目都有夜间内部放射学住院医师值班,但提供夜间内部主治医师值班的项目比例略有下降。然而,大多数住院医师下班后可以通过传呼机联系到主治医师。最后,住院医师的薪资和福利继续增加,这与过去几年的趋势一致。