Vaidya Hrisheekesh J, Emery Alexander W, Alexander Emma C, McDonnell Angus J, Burford Charlotte, Bulsara Max K
Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Medical Education, Medway NHS Foundation Trust, Gillingham, UK.
BMJ Open. 2019 Jul 17;9(7):e025403. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025403.
To determine if increased exposure to clinical specialties at medical school is associated with increased interest in pursuing that specialty as a career after foundation training.
A retrospective observational study.
31 UK medical schools were asked how much time students spend in each of the clinical specialties. We excluded two schools that were solely Graduate Entry, and two schools were excluded for insufficient information.
Time spent on clinical placement from UK undergraduate medical schools, and the training destinations of graduates from each school. A general linear model was used to analyse the relationship between the number of weeks spent in a specialty at medical school and the percentage of graduates from that medical school entering each of the Core Training (CT1)/Specialty Training (ST1) specialties directly after Foundation Year 2 (FY2).
Students spend a median of 85 weeks in clinical training. This includes a median of 28 weeks on medical firms, 15 weeks in surgical firms, and 8 weeks in general practice (GP). In general, the number of training posts available in a specialty was proportionate to the number of weeks spent in medical school, with some notable exceptions including GP. Importantly, we found that the number of weeks spent in a specialty at medical school did not predict the percentage of graduates of that school training in that specialty at CT1/ST1 level (ß coefficient=0.061, p=0.228).
This study found that there was no correlation between the percentage of FY2 doctors appointed directly to a CT1/ST1 specialty and the length of time that they would have spent in those specialties at medical school. This suggests that curriculum adjustments focusing solely on length of time spent in a specialty in medical school would be unlikely to solve recruitment gaps in individual specialties.
确定医学院校中临床专业接触时间的增加是否与基础培训后从事该专业职业的兴趣增加有关。
一项回顾性观察研究。
向31所英国医学院校询问学生在每个临床专业上花费的时间。我们排除了两所仅招收研究生入学的学校,以及两所因信息不足而被排除的学校。
英国本科医学院校临床实习的时间,以及各学校毕业生的培训去向。使用一般线性模型分析医学院校在某个专业上花费的周数与该医学院校在第2学年基础课程(FY2)结束后直接进入核心培训(CT1)/专科培训(ST1)各专业的毕业生百分比之间的关系。
学生临床培训的中位数为85周。这包括在内科实习的中位数为28周,外科实习15周,全科实习8周。一般来说,某个专业的培训岗位数量与医学院校花费的周数成比例,但也有一些明显的例外,包括全科医学。重要的是,我们发现医学院校在某个专业上花费的周数并不能预测该学校在CT1/ST1水平接受该专业培训的毕业生百分比(β系数 = 0.061,p = 0.228)。
本研究发现,直接被任命到CT1/ST1专业的FY2医生百分比与他们在医学院校在这些专业上花费的时间长度之间没有相关性。这表明仅专注于医学院校在某个专业上花费时间长度的课程调整不太可能解决个别专业的招聘缺口问题。