Schneider Sandra M, Gardner Angela F, Weiss Larry D, Wood Joseph P, Ybarra Michael, Beck Dennis M, Stauffer Arlen R, Wilkerson Dean, Brabson Thomas, Jennings Anthony, Mitchell Mark, McGrath Roland B, Christopher Theodore A, King Brent, Muelleman Robert L, Wagner Mary J, Char Douglas M, McGee Douglas L, Pilgrim Randy L, Moskovitz Joshua B, Zinkel Andrew R, Byers Michelle, Briggs William T, Hobgood Cherri D, Kupas Douglas F, Krueger Jennifer, Stratford Cary J, Jouriles Nicholas J
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Rochester, 601 Elmwood Ave, Box 655, Rochester, NY 14642, USA.
J Emerg Med. 2010 Aug;39(2):210-5. doi: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2010.06.001. Epub 2010 Jul 15.
The specialty of emergency medicine (EM) continues to experience a significant workforce shortage in the face of increasing demand for emergency care.
In July 2009, representatives of the leading EM organizations met in Dallas for the Future of Emergency Medicine Summit. Attendees at the Future of Emergency Medicine Summit agreed on the following: 1) Emergency medical care is an essential community service that should be available to all; 2) An insufficient emergency physician workforce also represents a potential threat to patient safety; 3) Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education/American Osteopathic Association (AOA)-accredited EM residency training and American Board of Medical Specialties/AOA EM board certification is the recognized standard for physician providers currently entering a career in emergency care; 4) Physician supply shortages in all fields contribute to-and will continue to contribute to-a situation in which providers with other levels of training may be a necessary part of the workforce for the foreseeable future; 5) A maldistribution of EM residency-trained physicians persists, with few pursuing practice in small hospital or rural settings; 6) Assuring that the public receives high quality emergency care while continuing to produce highly skilled EM specialists through EM training programs is the challenge for EM's future; 7) It is important that all providers of emergency care receive continuing postgraduate education.
面对急诊护理需求的不断增加,急诊医学专业仍面临严重的劳动力短缺问题。
2009年7月,主要急诊医学组织的代表齐聚达拉斯,参加急诊医学未来峰会。急诊医学未来峰会的与会者达成了以下共识:1)急诊医疗是一项基本的社区服务,应向所有人提供;2)急诊医生劳动力不足也对患者安全构成潜在威胁;3)研究生医学教育认证委员会/美国骨疗法协会(AOA)认可的急诊医学住院医师培训以及美国医学专业委员会/AOA急诊医学委员会认证是目前进入急诊护理领域的医生公认的标准;4)所有领域的医生供应短缺导致并将继续导致这样一种情况,即在可预见的未来,接受其他培训水平的人员可能成为劳动力的必要组成部分;5)急诊医学住院医师培训的医生分布不均的情况依然存在,很少有人在小型医院或农村地区执业;6)在通过急诊医学培训项目继续培养高技能急诊医学专家的同时,确保公众获得高质量的急诊护理是急诊医学未来面临的挑战;7)所有急诊护理提供者接受继续研究生教育非常重要。