Black-Schaffer W Stephen, Robboy Stanley J, Gross David J, Crawford James M, Johnson Kristen, Austin Melissa, Karcher Donald S, Johnson Rebecca L, Powell Suzanne Z, Sanfrancesco Joseph, Cohen Michael B
Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
Acad Pathol. 2021 Apr 7;8:23742895211002816. doi: 10.1177/23742895211002816. eCollection 2021 Jan-Dec.
This article presents findings from a 4-year series of surveys of new-in-practice pathologists, and a survey of physician employers of new pathologists, assessing how pathology graduate medical education prepares its graduates for practice. Using the methodology described in our previous study, we develop evidence for the importance of residency training for various practice areas, comparing findings over different practice settings, sizes, and lengths of time in practice. The principal findings are (1) while new-in-practice pathologists and their employers report residency generally prepared them well for practice, some areas-billing and coding, laboratory management, molecular pathology, and pathology informatics-consistently were identified as being important in practice but inadequately prepared for in residency; (2) other areas-autopsy pathology, and subspecialized apheresis and blood donor center blood banking services-consistently were identified as relatively unimportant in practice and excessively prepared for in residency; (3) the notion of a single comprehensive model for categorical training in residency is challenged by the disparity between broad general practice in some settings and narrower subspecialty practice in others; and (4) the need for preparation in some areas evolves during practice, raising questions about the appropriate mode and circumstance for training in these areas. The implications of these findings range from rebalancing the emphasis among practice areas in residency, to reconsidering the structure of graduate medical education in pathology to meet present and evolving future practice needs.
本文介绍了一项针对初入职场病理学家的为期4年的系列调查结果,以及一项针对新病理学家的医生雇主的调查结果,评估病理学毕业后医学教育如何使其毕业生为执业做好准备。我们采用先前研究中描述的方法,为住院医师培训对不同执业领域的重要性提供证据,比较不同执业环境、规模和执业时长的调查结果。主要调查结果如下:(1)虽然初入职场的病理学家及其雇主表示住院医师培训总体上使他们为执业做好了充分准备,但一些领域——计费与编码、实验室管理、分子病理学和病理信息学——在执业中一直被认为很重要,但在住院医师培训中准备不足;(2)其他领域——尸检病理学、专科血液成分单采和献血中心血库服务——在执业中一直被认为相对不重要,但在住院医师培训中准备过度;(3)住院医师分类培训单一综合模式的概念受到某些环境中广泛的全科执业与其他环境中较窄的亚专科执业之间差异的挑战;(4)某些领域的准备需求在执业过程中会发生变化,这引发了关于这些领域培训的适当模式和环境的问题。这些调查结果的影响范围从重新平衡住院医师培训中各执业领域的重点,到重新考虑病理学毕业后医学教育的结构,以满足当前和不断变化的未来执业需求。