Davis Ardis K, Reynolds P Preston, Kahn Norman B, Sherwood Roger A, Pascoe John M, Goroll Allan H, Wilson Modena E H, DeWitt Thomas G, Rich Eugene C
Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Acad Med. 2008 Nov;83(11):1021-9. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31818906c9.
The Title VII, Section 747 (Title VII) legislation, which authorizes the Training in Primary Care Medicine and Dentistry grant program, provides statutory authority to the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) to award contracts and cooperative agreements aimed at enhancing the quality of primary care training in the United States.More than 35 contracts and cooperative agreements have been issued by HRSA with Title VII federal funds, most often to national organizations promoting the training of physician assistants and medical students and representing the primary care disciplines of family medicine, general internal medicine, and general pediatrics. These activities have influenced generalist medicine through three mechanisms: (1) building collaboration among the primary care disciplines and between primary care and specialty medicine, (2) strengthening primary care generally through national initiatives designed to develop and implement new models of primary care training, and (3) enhancing the quality of primary care training in specific disease areas determined to be of national importance.The most significant outcomes of the Title VII contracts awarded to national primary care organizations are increased collaboration and enhanced innovation in ambulatory training for students, residents, and faculty. Overall, generalist competencies and education in new content areas have been the distinguishing features of these initiatives. This effort has enhanced not only generalist training but also the general medical education of all students, including future specialists, because so much of the generalist competency agenda is germane to the general medical education mission.This article is part of a theme issue of Academic Medicine on the Title VII health professions training programs.
《第七章第747节》(第七章)立法授权开展初级保健医学与牙科学培训资助项目,为卫生资源与服务管理局(HRSA)提供了法定权力,以授予旨在提高美国初级保健培训质量的合同和合作协议。HRSA已用第七章联邦资金发放了35份以上的合同和合作协议,大多授予促进医师助理和医学生培训、代表家庭医学、普通内科和普通儿科等初级保健学科的全国性组织。这些活动通过三种机制影响了全科医学:(1)在初级保健学科之间以及初级保健与专科医学之间建立合作;(2)通过旨在开发和实施初级保健培训新模式的全国性倡议总体上加强初级保健;(3)提高在确定为具有国家重要性的特定疾病领域的初级保健培训质量。授予全国初级保健组织的第七章合同的最显著成果是,学生、住院医师和教员在门诊培训方面的合作增加且创新增强。总体而言,全科能力以及新内容领域的教育一直是这些倡议的显著特点。这项工作不仅加强了全科培训,也加强了所有学生(包括未来的专科医生)的普通医学教育,因为许多全科能力议程与普通医学教育使命密切相关。本文是《学术医学》关于第七章卫生专业培训项目主题特刊的一部分。