Bratton R L, David A K
Kasson-Mayo Family Practice Clinic, MN.
Fam Med. 1993 Feb;25(2):107-10.
The University of Kentucky's Department of Family Medicine and the American Board of Family Practice experimented during 1989 and 1990 with the implementation of an accelerated family practice residency program. This pilot program, called the Accelerated Residency Program (ARP), allowed three fourth-year medical students to serve as first-year residents in family practice while simultaneously fulfilling their fourth-year medical school requirements. This allowed the students to complete medical school and residency training in six years instead of seven. Advantages of the program included maintaining clinical skills that might otherwise have been lost during the elective fourth year of medical school, stimulating interest in active learning, earlier entry into a wage-earning position, and an ultimate decrease in the length of the educational process. Disadvantages of the program included having to make important clinical decisions with less training, loss of elective and other training opportunities during the fourth year of medical school, the need for students to make an earlier career/specialty choice, and the possibility that other physicians might perceive graduates of the program as being less well trained.
肯塔基大学家庭医学系和美国家庭医疗委员会在1989年至1990年期间对一项加速家庭医疗住院医师培训计划的实施进行了试验。这个试点项目名为加速住院医师培训计划(ARP),允许三名四年级医学生在满足医学院四年级要求的同时,担任家庭医疗的一年级住院医师。这使得学生能够在六年而非七年内完成医学院学业和住院医师培训。该计划的优点包括保持可能在医学院四年级选修期间丧失的临床技能、激发主动学习的兴趣、更早进入有收入的岗位以及最终缩短教育过程的时长。该计划的缺点包括在培训较少的情况下必须做出重要临床决策、在医学院四年级期间失去选修和其他培训机会、学生需要更早做出职业/专业选择,以及其他医生可能认为该计划的毕业生训练不足。