Kwon Hyo-Jin, Lee Young-Mee, Chang Hyung-Joo, Kim Ae-Ri
Department of Medical Humanities, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Department of Pathology, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Korean J Med Educ. 2015 Sep;27(3):201-12. doi: 10.3946/kjme.2015.27.3.201. Epub 2015 Aug 26.
The core curriculum in graduate medical education (GME) is an educational program that covers the minimum body of knowledge and skills that is required of all residents, regardless of their specialty. This study examined the opinions of stakeholders in GME regarding the core curriculum.
A questionnaire was administered at three tertiary hospitals that were affiliated with one university; 192 residents and 61 faculty members and attending physicians participated in the survey. The questionnaire comprised six items on physician competency and the needs for a core curriculum. Questions on subjects or topics and adequate training years for each topics were asked only to residents.
Most residents (78.6%) and faculty members (86.9%) chose "medical expertise" as the "doctor's role in the 21st century." In contrast, communicator, manager, and collaborator were recognized by less than 30% of all participants. Most residents (74.1%) responded that a core curriculum is "necessary but not feasible," whereas 68.3% of faculty members answered that it is "absolutely needed." Regarding subjects that should be included in the core curriculum, residents and faculty members had disparate preferences- residents preferred more "management of a private clinic" and "financial management," whereas faculty members desired "medical ethics" and "communication skills."
Residents and faculty members agree that residents should develop a wide range of competencies in their training. However, the perception of the feasibility and opinions on the contents of the core curriculum differed between groups. Further studies with larger samples should be conducted to define the roles and professional competencies of physicians and the needs for a core curriculum in GME.
研究生医学教育(GME)的核心课程是一项教育计划,涵盖了所有住院医师所需的最低知识和技能体系,无论其专业如何。本研究调查了GME利益相关者对核心课程的看法。
对一所大学附属的三家三级医院进行了问卷调查;192名住院医师以及61名教员和主治医师参与了调查。问卷包括关于医师能力和核心课程需求的六个项目。仅向住院医师询问了关于主题或课题以及每个课题的适当培训年限的问题。
大多数住院医师(78.6%)和教员(86.9%)选择“医学专业知识”作为“21世纪医生的角色”。相比之下,只有不到30%的参与者认可沟通者、管理者和协作者的角色。大多数住院医师(74.1%)回答核心课程“有必要但不可行”,而68.3%的教员回答“绝对需要”。关于应纳入核心课程的主题,住院医师和教员有不同的偏好——住院医师更喜欢“私人诊所管理”和“财务管理”,而教员希望纳入“医学伦理学”和“沟通技巧”。
住院医师和教员一致认为住院医师在培训中应培养广泛的能力。然而,两组对核心课程可行性的看法以及对其内容的意见存在差异。应进行更大样本量的进一步研究,以确定医生的角色和专业能力以及GME中核心课程的需求。