Department of Gastroenterology, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0362, USA.
Am J Gastroenterol. 2011 Mar;106(3):395-7. doi: 10.1038/ajg.2010.416. Epub 2011 Feb 8.
Gastroenterology (GI) fellowship training slots are not expected to increase over the next 10 years despite a 9% estimated US population growth. There is also no expected increase in the number of hours worked per gastroenterologist; instead, this number will probably decrease slightly, as GI will have continued growth in the percentage of women and of men in dual career families. The current trend of "sub-specialization" within GI is likely to continue, although this will not be formally recognized by further extension of the length of training or by additional board requirements. Current sub-specialties include hepatology, inflammatory bowel disease, motility, small bowel imaging, and interventional endoscopy. Most "sub-specialty" GI training will be incorporated within the 3-year fellowship, with the probable exception of interventional endoscopy, which will likely take an additional training year. End points for training and criteria for credentialing in the future will focus more on quality measures in both procedural and cognitive aspects of GI. Hopefully, this move to "competency evaluation with quality measures" will eliminate undertrained endoscopists such as the non-gastroenterologist performing occasional colonoscopy or the gastroenterologist performing occasional ERCP. Post-graduate GI training is also undergoing transformation, partly due to a decrease in industry support of graduate medical education, which has previously been heavily relied upon. The expected wider use of web-based training by the technology-comfortable younger generation of physicians may partly fill this gap. Despite the challenges facing GI training at both the fellowship and post-graduate level, GI is expected to remain a popular specialty choice. It is likely that sub-specialization within GI will continue to grow in both academic and private practices due in part to an increasing focus on quality patient outcomes.
尽管预计美国人口将增长 9%,但在未来 10 年内,胃肠病学(GI)研究员培训名额预计不会增加。预计每位胃肠病学家的工作时间也不会增加;相反,这个数字可能会略有下降,因为 GI 中女性和从事双重职业家庭的男性的比例将会继续增加。目前 GI 内“亚专业”的趋势可能会继续,尽管这不会通过进一步延长培训时间或增加额外的委员会要求来正式承认。目前的亚专业包括肝脏病学、炎症性肠病、动力、小肠成像和介入内镜。大多数“亚专业”GI 培训将包含在 3 年的研究员培训中,可能例外的是介入内镜,它可能需要额外的培训年。未来培训的终点和认证标准将更侧重于 GI 的程序和认知方面的质量措施。希望这种向“质量措施的能力评估”的转变将消除训练不足的内镜医生,例如偶尔进行结肠镜检查的非胃肠病学家或偶尔进行 ERCP 的胃肠病学家。毕业后的 GI 培训也在发生转变,部分原因是工业界对研究生医学教育的支持减少,而过去研究生医学教育严重依赖工业界的支持。预计年轻一代的医生会更多地使用基于网络的培训,这可能会在一定程度上填补这一空白。尽管 GI 研究员和毕业后培训都面临挑战,但 GI 仍有望成为一个受欢迎的专业选择。由于对患者治疗质量的关注度增加,学术和私人实践中的 GI 亚专业可能会继续增长。