Cotton-Hannah Chair in the History of Medicine, Department of Social Studies of Medicine, McGill University, 3647 Peel Street, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Global Health. 2021 Aug 28;17(1):96. doi: 10.1186/s12992-021-00733-0.
This article presents a history of efforts by the World Health Organization and its most important ally, the World Federation for Medical Education, to strengthen and standardize international medical education. This aspect of WHO activity has been largely ignored in recent historical and sociological work on that organization and on global health generally.
Historical textual analysis is applied to the digitalized archives and publications of the World Health Organization and the World Federation for Medical Education, as well as to publications in the periodic literature commenting on the standardization of international medical training and the problems associated with it.
Efforts to reform medical training occurred during three distinct chronological periods: the 1950s and 1960s characterized by efforts to disseminate western scientific norms; the 1970s and 1980s dominated by efforts to align medical training with the WHO's Primary Healthcare Policy; and from the late 1980s to the present, the campaign to impose global standards and institutional accreditation on medical schools worldwide. A growing number of publications in the periodic literature comment on the standardization of international medical training and the problems associated with it, notably the difficulty of reconciling global standards with local needs and of demonstrating the effects of curricular change.
本文介绍了世界卫生组织及其最重要的盟友世界医学教育联合会为加强和规范国际医学教育所做的努力。在最近关于该组织和全球卫生的历史和社会学研究中,这方面的世卫组织活动在很大程度上被忽视了。
对世界卫生组织和世界医学教育联合会的数字化档案和出版物,以及对国际医学培训标准化及其相关问题进行评论的定期文献中的出版物进行历史文本分析。
改革医学培训的努力发生在三个不同的时间阶段:20 世纪 50 年代和 60 年代,其特点是努力传播西方科学规范;20 世纪 70 年代和 80 年代,以将医学培训与世界卫生组织的初级卫生保健政策相协调为主导;从 20 世纪 80 年代末到现在,全球范围内推行医学院校全球标准和机构认证的运动。定期文献中越来越多的出版物对国际医学培训的标准化及其相关问题进行评论,特别是在协调全球标准与当地需求以及展示课程改革效果方面存在困难。