Barsoumian Alice E, Hartzell Joshua D, Bonura Erin M, Ressner Roseanne A, Whitman Timothy J, Yun Heather C
Department of Medicine, Infectious Disease Service, San Antonio Military Medical Center, 3551 Roger Brooke Drive, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, TX.
Department of Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, 4301 Jones Bridge Rd, Bethesda, MD.
Mil Med. 2018 Jul 1;183(7-8):e299-e303. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usx091.
Nationally, the number of internal medicine physicians practicing in primary care has decreased amidst increasing interest in hospitalist medicine. Current priorities in the Military Health System include access to primary care and retention of trained personnel. Recently, we have conducted a study of military internal medicine residents' decision to enter infectious disease. As part of our larger effort, we saw an opportunity to characterize factors impacting decision making of internal medicine residents' desire to apply for subspecialty training and to extend active duty service obligations.
Questions were developed after discussion with various military graduate medical education and internal medicine leaders, underwent external review, and were added to a larger question set. The survey link was distributed electronically to all U.S. military affiliated residencies' graduating internal medicine residents in December 2016-January 2017. Data were analyzed by decision to apply to fellowship and decision to extend military obligation using Fisher's exact test or Pearon's chi-square test.
Sixty-eight residents from 10 of 11 military residency programs responded, for a response rate of 51%. The majority (62%) applied to fellowship to start after residency completion. Reasons cited for applying to fellowship included wanting to become a specialist as soon as possible (74%), wishing to avoid being a general internist (57%), and because they are unable to practice as a hospitalist in the military (52%). Fellowship applicants were more likely to plan to extend their military obligation than non-applicants, as did those with longer duration of military commitments. No other factors, including Uniformed Services University attendance or participation in undergraduate military experiences, were found to impact plan to extend active duty service commitment.
The majority of graduating internal medicine residents apply for fellowship and report a desire to avoid being a general internist. Prospective fellows anticipate extending their active duty commitment, as do those with longer commitments.
在全国范围内,随着对住院医师医学的兴趣增加,从事初级保健工作的内科医生数量有所减少。军事卫生系统当前的优先事项包括获得初级保健服务和留住经过培训的人员。最近,我们对军队内科住院医师进入传染病领域的决定进行了一项研究。作为我们更大努力的一部分,我们发现有机会确定影响内科住院医师申请专科培训和延长现役服务义务的决策因素。
在与各军事研究生医学教育和内科领域的领导者进行讨论后制定了问题,经过外部审查,并被添加到一个更大的问题集中。2016年12月至2017年1月,通过电子方式将调查链接分发给所有隶属于美国军队的住院医师项目中即将毕业的内科住院医师。使用Fisher精确检验或Pearson卡方检验,根据申请专科培训的决定和延长军事义务的决定对数据进行分析。
来自11个军事住院医师项目中的10个项目的68名住院医师做出了回应,回复率为51%。大多数(62%)申请在完成住院医师培训后开始专科培训。申请专科培训的原因包括希望尽快成为专科医生(74%)、希望避免成为普通内科医生(57%)以及因为他们无法在军队中担任住院医师(52%)。与未申请者相比,申请专科培训的人更有可能计划延长他们的军事义务,有更长军事服役期的人也是如此。没有发现其他因素,包括就读于军医大学或参与本科军事经历,会影响延长现役服务承诺的计划。
大多数即将毕业的内科住院医师申请专科培训,并表示希望避免成为普通内科医生。未来的专科培训申请者预计会延长他们的现役承诺,有更长服役期的人也是如此。