Ramamurthi B, Lee K C, Fukushima T, Takakura K, Petty P G, Weinstein P R
Institute of Neurology, Madras Medical College, India.
Neurosurgery. 1989 Dec;25(6):1003-8.
During the 1985 annual meeting of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons in Honolulu, neurosurgical training and practice in India, Korea, Japan, and Australasia were discussed at the International Committee symposium. This article summarizes the information presented. India has about 300 neurosurgeons for a population of 650 million, while Japan has about 4,000 neurosurgeons and trainees for a population of 120 million. Korea has 424 neurosurgeons for a population of 41.5 million, and Australasia has 92 neurosurgeons and 19 trainees for 17.5 million people. Various other demographic, institutional, organizational, and economic aspects of neurological health care and delivery, education, and quality control are described. While financing and availability of adequate neurosurgical care remains a major problem in India, it appears that reducing the number of neurosurgical trainees remains, as it is in North America, a major issue in Japan and, to a lesser extent, in Korea. This problem, as well as certification of the quality of training, is being managed effectively in Australasia.
在1985年于檀香山举行的神经外科医师大会年会上,国际委员会专题研讨会上讨论了印度、韩国、日本和澳大拉西亚地区的神经外科培训与实践情况。本文总结了会上所呈现的信息。印度每6.5亿人口中有约300名神经外科医生,而日本每1.2亿人口中有约4000名神经外科医生及实习医生。韩国每4150万人口中有424名神经外科医生,澳大拉西亚地区每1750万人口中有92名神经外科医生和19名实习医生。文中还描述了神经卫生保健与服务、教育以及质量控制等方面的各种人口统计学、机构、组织和经济情况。虽然在印度,充足的神经外科护理的资金筹集和可及性仍是一个主要问题,但在日本,如同在北美一样,减少神经外科实习医生数量似乎仍是一个主要问题,在韩国这个问题的程度稍轻。在澳大拉西亚地区,这个问题以及培训质量认证都得到了有效管理。