Langley Natalie R, Butaric Lauren N
Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic Arizona, 13400 E. Shea Blvd, Scottsdale, AZ 85259 USA.
Department of Anatomy, Des Moines University, Des Moines, IA 50312 USA.
Med Sci Educ. 2019 Oct 24;30(1):129-137. doi: 10.1007/s40670-019-00809-y. eCollection 2020 Mar.
The need for anatomical knowledge is increasingly in demand as new medical and allied-health professions programs continue to open, but there is a growing dearth of educators with formal training in the anatomical sciences. Several sources for anatomy faculty have been suggested, including surgeons, but few have considered a more obvious, alternative approach to this shortage: hiring qualified faculty from other PhD departments/programs whose graduates receive formal training in anatomy, including biological anthropologists. This study surveyed 305 biological anthropology graduates to assimilate information about the nature and extent of training among biological anthropology graduates in the core anatomy disciplines (anatomy, histology, embryology, histology, neuroanatomy), and to determine whether biological anthropology graduates value and apply anatomy training. Only 36% of PhDs reported that anatomy was a required course, but 72% of PhD graduates took an anatomy course (usually gross anatomy with a human cadaveric dissection laboratory). Histology, embryology, and neuroanatomy also were not required to obtain a PhD, though some of this material was covered during the anatomy course, and some students opted to take these courses as electives. Forty-five percent of PhD students reported teaching experience in gross anatomy courses with cadaveric dissection. Ninety-four percent of biological anthropology PhD graduates are prepared to teach human osteology, and 48% are comfortable teaching gross anatomy. Biological anthropology graduates bring unique expertise, training, and research experience to medical education programs, and many are well-suited to fill the growing number of anatomy faculty positions.
随着新的医学及相关健康专业项目不断开设,对解剖学知识的需求日益增加,但接受过解剖学科学正规培训的教育工作者却越来越短缺。有人提出了几种解剖学教师的来源,包括外科医生,但很少有人考虑过一种更明显的、解决这一短缺问题的替代方法:从其他博士系/项目中招聘合格的教师,这些项目的毕业生接受过解剖学的正规培训,包括生物人类学家。本研究对305名生物人类学毕业生进行了调查,以收集有关生物人类学毕业生在核心解剖学学科(解剖学、组织学、胚胎学、组织学、神经解剖学)中的培训性质和程度的信息,并确定生物人类学毕业生是否重视并应用解剖学培训。只有36%的博士报告称解剖学是必修课,但72%的博士毕业生上过解剖学课程(通常是包含人体尸体解剖实验室的大体解剖学)。组织学、胚胎学和神经解剖学也不是获得博士学位的必修课,尽管其中一些内容在解剖学课程中有所涉及,一些学生选择将这些课程作为选修课。45%的博士生报告有在包含尸体解剖的大体解剖学课程中的教学经验。94%的生物人类学博士毕业生准备好教授人类骨学,48%的人能够胜任大体解剖学的教学。生物人类学毕业生为医学教育项目带来了独特的专业知识、培训和研究经验,许多人非常适合填补日益增多的解剖学教师职位。