Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Montefiore Medical Center, NY.
Division of Chronic Pain, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.
Pain Physician. 2024 Jul;27(5):E627-E636.
Since 1992, when the Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) acknowledged pain medicine as a subspecialty, the field has experienced significant growth in its number of programs, diversity of sponsoring specialties, treatment algorithms, and popularity among applicants. These shifts prompted changes to the educational model, overseen by program directors (PDs) and the ACGME. The pool of pain fellowship applicants also changed during that period.
This study aims to investigate trainees' reasons for applying to pain medicine fellowship programs as well as the applicants' specific expectations, interests, and motivations, thereby contributing to the remodeling and universal improvement of programs across the country.
Online survey via SurveyMonkey. The online questionnaire targeted pain fellowship applicants in 2023 and current fellows in the US.
Our study was designed by board members of the Association of Pain Program Directors (APPD). The board disseminated a survey to those who applied to ACGME Pain Medicine fellowships in 2023 as well as to existing fellows. The survey was emailed to residency and fellowship PDs for dissemination to their trainees. The participants answered a 12-question survey on their reasons for pursuing pain medicine fellowships, expectations of and beyond those fellowships, and educational adjustments.
There were 283 survey participants (80% applicants in residency training and 20% fellows). Participants ranked basic interventional procedures and a strong desire to learn advanced procedures as the most significant factors in pursuing a pain fellowship. Most trainees (70%) did not wish to pursue a 2-year fellowship, and 50% desired to go into private practice.
The relatively small number of respondents is a limitation that could introduce sampling error. Since most of the respondents were from the fields of physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R) and anesthesia, the use of convenience sampling reduced our ability to generalize the results to the wider community. Furthermore, approximately 80% of the trainees were residents, who might have had less experience in or knowledge of the survey's particulars than did the fellows.
This survey demonstrated that procedural volume and diversity were important factors in trainees' decisions to apply to the field of pain medicine; however, extending the duration of a pain fellowship was not an option survey participants favored. Therefore, PDs and educational stakeholders in pain fellowship training need to develop creative strategies to maintain competitive applicants' interest while they adapt to our evolving field.
自 1992 年,美国毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)认可疼痛医学为亚专科以来,该领域的项目数量、赞助专业的多样性、治疗方案以及在申请人中的受欢迎程度都有了显著增长。这些转变促使项目主任(PD)和 ACGME 对教育模式进行了更改。在此期间,疼痛研究员申请人群也发生了变化。
本研究旨在探讨学员申请疼痛医学研究员课程的原因,以及学员的具体期望、兴趣和动机,从而为全国范围内的课程重塑和普遍改进做出贡献。
通过 SurveyMonkey 进行在线调查。在线问卷面向 2023 年申请 ACGME 疼痛医学研究员课程的学员和美国现任研究员。
我们的研究由疼痛项目主任协会(APPD)的董事会成员设计。董事会向 2023 年申请 ACGME 疼痛医学研究员课程的学员以及现任研究员发送了一份调查。该调查通过住院医师和研究员 PD 电子邮件发送给他们的学员。参与者回答了关于他们追求疼痛医学研究员课程的原因、对课程的期望以及超出课程的期望以及教育调整的 12 个问题的调查。
共有 283 名调查参与者(80%处于住院医师培训中,20%为研究员)。参与者将基本介入程序和强烈学习高级程序的愿望列为追求疼痛研究员课程的最重要因素。大多数学员(70%)不希望从事为期两年的研究员课程,50%希望从事私人执业。
相对较少的受访者数量是一个限制因素,可能会引入抽样误差。由于大多数受访者来自物理医学和康复(PM&R)和麻醉领域,因此使用方便抽样降低了我们将结果推广到更广泛社区的能力。此外,大约 80%的学员是住院医师,他们可能对调查的具体内容的经验或知识比研究员少。
这项调查表明,程序量和多样性是学员决定申请疼痛医学领域的重要因素;然而,延长疼痛研究员课程的时间并不是参与者倾向的选择。因此,疼痛研究员培训的 PD 和教育利益相关者需要制定创造性策略,在适应我们不断发展的领域的同时,保持有竞争力的申请人的兴趣。