Halperin Edward C, Goldberg Robert B
E.C. Halperin is chancellor and chief executive officer, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York, and provost for biomedical affairs, Touro College and University System, New York, New York. R.B. Goldberg is executive dean, Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine, New York, New York.
Acad Med. 2016 May;91(5):639-44. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001128.
U.S. medical education faces a threat from for-profit Caribbean medical schools which purchase clinical rotation slots for their students at U.S. hospitals. These offshore schools are monetizing a system that was previously characterized as a duty-the duty of the current generation of physicians to educate their successors. Offshore schools purchase clinical rotation slots using funds largely derived from federally subsidized student loans. This leads to pressure on U.S. schools to pay for clinical clerkships and is forcing some of them to find new clinical training sites.For-profit Caribbean schools largely escape the type of scrutiny that U.S. schools face from U.S. national accreditation organizations. They also enroll large classes of students with lower undergraduate GPAs and Medical College Admission Test scores than those of students at U.S. medical schools; their students take and pass Step 1 of the United States Medical Licensing Examination at a substantially lower rate than that of U.S. medical students; and their students match for residencies at a fraction of the rate of U.S. medical school graduates.Among the potential solutions proposed by the authors are passing laws to hold for-profit Caribbean schools to standards for board passage rates, placing restrictions on federal student loans, monitoring attrition rates, and denying offshore schools access to U.S. clinical training sites unless they meet accreditation standards equivalent to those of U.S. medical schools.
美国医学教育正面临来自营利性加勒比地区医学院校的威胁,这些院校为其学生在美国医院购买临床轮转名额。这些境外院校正在将一个以前被视为职责的体系货币化,即当代医生教育其继任者的职责。境外院校使用主要来自联邦政府补贴的学生贷款的资金来购买临床轮转名额。这给美国院校带来了支付临床实习费用的压力,并迫使其中一些院校寻找新的临床培训地点。营利性加勒比地区院校很大程度上逃避了美国院校所面临的来自美国国家认证组织的那种审查。它们还招收大量本科平均绩点和医学院入学考试分数低于美国医学院学生的学生;其学生通过美国医师执照考试第一步的比例远低于美国医学生;并且其学生获得住院医师匹配的比例仅为美国医学院毕业生的一小部分。作者提出的潜在解决方案包括通过法律使营利性加勒比地区院校达到通过委员会考试率的标准、对联邦学生贷款加以限制、监测辍学率,以及除非境外院校符合等同于美国医学院校的认证标准,否则拒绝它们进入美国临床培训地点。