Carta Revisado por pares

Internal Medicine Training: Putt or Get Off the Green

2006; American College of Physicians; Volume: 144; Issue: 12 Linguagem: Inglês

10.7326/0003-4819-144-12-200606200-00014

ISSN

1539-3704

Autores

Steven A. Schroeder, Harold C. Sox,

Tópico(s)

Hospital Admissions and Outcomes

Resumo

Editorials20 June 2006Internal Medicine Training: Putt or Get Off the GreenFREESteven A. Schroeder, MD and Harold C. Sox, MD, EditorSteven A. Schroeder, MDFrom University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-1211, and the American College of Physicians, Philadelphia, PA 19106.Search for more papers by this author and Harold C. Sox, MD, EditorFrom University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-1211, and the American College of Physicians, Philadelphia, PA 19106.Search for more papers by this authorAuthor, Article, and Disclosure Informationhttps://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-144-12-200606200-00014 SectionsAboutVisual AbstractPDF ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail This issue features 2 position papers on reforming internal medicine residency education (1, 2), 1 from the American College of Physicians (ACP) and 1 from the Association of Program Directors in Internal Medicine (APDIM). Both acknowledge aspects of internal medicine practice—reimbursement, lifestyle, autonomy, managed care hassles, the burden of chronic illness—that contribute to low residency fill rates. But they then correctly point out that educational reforms could make a big difference (1, 2). They argue cogently that the traditional training model lacks many ingredients that are essential preparation for internal medicine practice. Other aspects of residency training are unattractive to students taking internal medicine clerkships: unnecessary stress, devaluation of office-based training, and too little exposure to excellent role models. The proposed reforms are visionary, far-reaching, and appealing. The 2 reports are remarkably similar, except that the ACP also calls for redesign of the internal medicine student clerkship.The 2 position papers strongly affirm the importance of training good generalists. The underlying premise is that most internists should know how to provide front-line care for the major diseases in any specialty of internal medicine. The case for training good generalists is based on strong evidence. First, patients want good generalist physicians to take responsibility for their care (3). Second, many health care systems (for example, Kaiser Permanente, the Veterans Administration, Group Health Cooperative, the military health system, and the Palo Alto Medical Clinic) organize their practice around primary care physicians (4, 5). Third, many internal medicine subspecialists also need to function as generalists. While the position papers make a strong case for substantially more ambulatory learning time, the current system gives first priority to the care of fragile hospital patients. Shifting the balance toward more ambulatory care during training would be expensive, as shown by efforts to provide additional inpatient coverage in response to limits on residents' duty hours.Education reforms address only 1 element among many that are responsible for a decline in interest in internal medicine as a career. Internal medicine needs payment reform and better organization of office-based care. While these problems may some day yield to skillful political advocacy, they are beyond internists' direct control. In contrast, internists control the curriculum of internal medicine residencies, so education reform is both a priceless opportunity and a test of our will.The ACP and APDIM position papers describe the goal of reform, but they do not describe a strategy for reaching that goal. In this editorial, we focus on 2 key obstacles with which any strategy must reckon. First, internists do not control the resources needed to effect change in residency education. Second, internal medicine is ambivalent about what it stands for and what it should become.The path to successful implementation of the ACP and APDIM reforms will require fundamental changes in the organization and funding of residency training. Control of graduate medical education means control of its financial support and accreditation. The sponsoring hospitals receive funds for residency stipends and teaching salaries largely from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). The hospital controls the flow of dollars to the training programs. The formulas for distributing money seem arcane at the federal level and mysterious at the local level. The department chairs delegate conduct of the residencies to program directors. Accreditation, unlike financing, is under the control of the profession. It is a key point of leverage because teaching hospitals want fully accredited training programs that will attract good trainees to provide care to patients. The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education accredits individual residency programs through its 27 constituent residency review committees. It sets the standards for the content of training. The American Board of Medical Specialties, an organization of specialty groups, certifies physicians who have received specialty training. Hospital executives and accrediting institutions wield the power to effect change. The organizations that issued these position papers—the ACP and APDIM—have no direct control over any aspect of this complex process. To be sure, they are vitally involved in internal medicine residency programs (APDIM) and in the well-being of internists (ACP), and ACP plays a role in the accreditation process as one of the appointing organizations to the Internal Medicine Residency Review Committee. But they don't hold the power to effect change in graduate medical education.Wouldn't it be nice to see organizations like the Association of Professors of Medicine (the chairs of medicine), the Council of Teaching Hospitals (the hospital directors), the Internal Medicine Residency Review Committee (accreditation of training programs), and the American Board of Internal Medicine (credentialing of internists) take a strong public stand on the content of internal medicine training? Without their active support, change is unlikely, because redesign means shifting more time, energy, and resources to ambulatory care training—at the expense of hospital care.The second major shortcoming of the 2 position papers is that they presuppose a commitment to training excellent generalists. We think that internal medicine's actions bespeak ambivalence on this crucial point. Here we use a sports analogy: the golfer who can't decide how to aim a putt on a tricky green. For the APDIM and ACP redesigns to occur, internal medicine needs to “putt or get off the green.” Getting off the green would mean giving up serious efforts to train internists to function as generalists in office practice, either as general internists or subspecialists. It would mean ceding the primary care field to others. Internal medicine would then become a confederation of specialists, each specialty with its own needs. Opting out of training generalists could have 1 positive consequence: Internal medicine would have fewer residency positions, which might make the specialty more competitive for U.S. medical students, who today fill fewer than 60% of the available spots (6).Getting off the green could lead to difficulties. Balkanizing internal medicine is risky. The prosperous subspecialties may secede into independent departments, as happened with surgery. Perhaps because all internists now have a common training model and learn the same basic skills, they share allegiance to their parent discipline. It would be harder to maintain that cohesion, so necessary for effectiveness in the political arena, without the common experience of general internal medicine training, because the worlds of, say, rheumatology and cardiology are so very different. And fewer generalist internists would create a vacuum in primary care. Who would fill that vacuum is not clear, given what ACP has recently called “the impending collapse of primary care” (6) and the rapidly declining interest in family medicine residency training (7).Putt or get off the green? Putting would mean making a serious commitment to training general internists for office-based practice—not just hospital-based practice. It would mean honoring the generalist trunk of internal medicine's tree by creating a good environment for future subspecialty internists to learn office-based practice skills outside their area of specialty expertise. Making this commitment would entail placing educational needs above service needs and working with the giant hospitals and graduate medical education funding sources to provide excellent service and education. Although achieving both goals would be expensive, we contend that leaders will find the money if they make them both a high priority, especially if CMS uses its financial support of graduate medical education to leverage change. The ACP and APDIM position papers outline what the new system would look like (1, 2). Another editorialist has recently described a related future scenario (8). But the ACP and APDIM reforms would require determined advocacy from the chairs of medicine, and we fear their attention is elsewhere—in building departmental research programs and the faculty practice plan, the main sources of prestige and income for departments of medicine.Either of these options is preferable to the default position: trying to provide excellent ambulatory training while inpatient care needs drive internal medicine residency training. This model is not attracting enough of the outstanding students who will lead internal medicine clinically and academically. Moreover, the default position is leading to compromise of the teaching mission, continued waning of medical student interest in low-tech fields, and an increasing mismatch between learning during training and subsequent day-to-day practice. These outcomes would be a disservice to a tax-paying public that has a right to expect its generous support of graduate medical education to produce physicians that meet the public's needs.The APDIM and ACP position papers contain an accurate diagnosis and present an inspired vision of what major redesign could accomplish. But they lack 2 crucial elements: endorsement by those empowered to make the necessary changes and, most important, a strategy for uniting internal medicine around a future course for the discipline. Without unity of purpose, we fear that internal medicine is headed down the default path of halfway measures.Steven A. Schroeder, MDUniversity of California, San FranciscoSan Francisco, CA 94143-1211Harold C. Sox, MDEditorReferences1. Weinberger SE, Smith LG, Collier VU. Redesigning training for internal medicine. Ann Intern Med. 2006;144:927-32. LinkGoogle Scholar2. Fitzgibbons JP, Bordley DR, Berkowitz LR, Miller BW, Henderson MC. Redesigning residency education in internal medicine: a position paper from the Association of Program Directors in Internal Medicine. Ann Intern Med. 2006;144:920-6. LinkGoogle Scholar3. Safran DG. Defining the future of primary care: what can we learn from patients? Ann Intern Med. 2003;138:248-55. [PMID: 12558375] LinkGoogle Scholar4. Halvorson G. Kaiser Permanente [Editorial]. Ann Intern Med. 2003;138:232. Google Scholar5. Feldbau G, Scott CM. Group Health Cooperative [Editorial]. Ann Intern Med. 2003;138:232. Google Scholar6. American College of Physicians. Creating a new national workforce for internal medicine. 3 April 2006. Available at www.acponline.org/college/pressroom/as06/workforce_paper.pdf. Google Scholar7. National Resident Matching Program. Results and Data, 1975–2006. Washington, DC: National Resident Matching Program; 2005. Google Scholar8. Whitcomb ME. The future of academic health centers [Editorial]. Acad Med. 2006;81:299-300. [PMID: 16565175] CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar Comments0 CommentsSign In to Submit A Comment Ira R. SharpAlbert Einstein Medical Center (Philadelphia), Abington Memorial Hospital - Abington , PA.17 July 2006 Whither General Internal Medicine? I am a general internist in an internal medicine group, 24 years out from residency, and have had residents from several Philadelphia area hospitals rotate throught our offices for several years. Most of the residents we have hosted are PGY-1 American graduates who are doing a transitional year in preparation for their future residencies in Radiology, Dermatology, Ophthalmology and Anesthesia. Each resident has a one month rotation in prmary care IM in our office. I always ask them why they choose their respective fields and how many of their graduation classmates chose internal medicine - especially primary care (almost none did). It is amazing the uniformity of answers. Almost all chose their fields because of lifestyle and money. I really can't blame them, but I wonder where the future doctors will come from whose goal is to actually take care of people and be "their doctor". It seems to me that the future of our health care system will be based on general internists and FP's who graduated from foreign schools. As with other endeavors, it seems that foreign graduates will fill a void that Americans can't or won't fill. Conflict of Interest: None declared Linda N. PrietoNo Affiliation5 July 2006 Get off the Green I am a General Internist, in a solo practice as far out of the hospital as I could have imagined. I have a home care practice seeing the most frail elderly in their homes, assisted living facilities and nursing homes. Having graduated from a residency in 1993, where I never left the hospital, but felt very competent in taking care of very sick patients, I really had no problems transitioning to other places of care. I have learned to become an expert at what I do, because I learned how to find the answers and to whom I needed to talk. Internal Medicine should not shrink from Schroeder and Sox's suggestion that it "get off the green." How many cardiologists or gastroenterologists (or any other specialists) really consider themselves Internists? Even during residency they only saw Internal Medicine as a stop along the way. What percentage of non-academic specialists continue their membership in the ACP? How many recertify in Internal Medicine unless they are forced by their hospital? I say it is time to make two tracks of Internal Medicine residency and train excellent Generalists and Specialists. Conflict of Interest: None declared Michael A. PatmasClinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University30 June 2006 Redesigning Residency Education: Programming Failure TO THE EDITOR: Schroeder and Sox (1) correctly identify deficiencies in the APDIM (2) and ACP (3) position papers on redesigning residency education. Notably absent from both papers and their editorial is yet another crucial deficiency, the lack of adequate preparation for the business side of medical practice. Most internists emerge from training well prepared for their clinical roles but vastly underprepared for success in practice. It is the management of our practices that generates the greatest frustration. Yet, the knowledge and skills needed for success in today's medical marketplace are all but ignored in residency training. Precious few programs provide any content on economics, practice or financial management, operations management, legal and regulatory aspects of medical practice or innovation mangement. Relying upon outdated operational models and century old practice workflows, we are thrust into a rapidly evolving system programmed to fail. If the goal of residency redesign is to better prepare future physicians for success, program directors would be wise to include sufficient exposure to management education. This need not require a graduate degree in management, merely an essential skills practicum that exposes residents to that which they will need to know to effectively manage their practices and thrive dspite the vagaries of the marketplace. Michael A. Patmas, MD, MMM, FACP. Oregon Health and Science University Portland, Oregon References 1. Schroeder SA, Sox HC. Internal medicine training: putt or get off the green. Ann Intern Med. 2006; 144:938-939. 2. Fitzgibbons JP, Bordley DR, Berkowitz LR, Miller BW, Henderson, MC. Redesigning residency education in internal medicine: a position paper from the Association of Program Directors in Internal medicine. Ann Intern Med. 2006; 144:920-6. 3. Weinberger SE, Smith LG, Collier VU. Redesigning training for internal medicine. Ann Intern Med. 2006; 144:927-32. Conflict of Interest: Board of Directors, American College of Physician Executives Author, Article, and Disclosure InformationAffiliations: From University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-1211, and the American College of Physicians, Philadelphia, PA 19106.Disclosures: None disclosed.Corresponding Author: Steven A. Schroeder, MD, Box 1211, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-1211; e-mail, [email protected]ucsf.edu.Current Author Addresses: Dr. Schroeder: Box 1211, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-1211.Dr. Sox: American College of Physicians, 190 N. Independence Mall West, Philadelphia, PA 19106. PreviousarticleNextarticle Advertisement FiguresReferencesRelatedDetailsSee AlsoRedesigning Training for Internal Medicine Steven E. Weinberger , Lawrence G. Smith , Virginia U. Collier , and Redesigning Residency Education in Internal Medicine: A Position Paper from the Association of Program Directors in Internal Medicine John P. Fitzgibbons , Donald R. Bordley , Lee R. Berkowitz , Beth W. Miller , and Mark C. Henderson Redesigning Training for Internal Medicine Steven E. Weinberger , Lawrence G. Smith , and Virginia U. Collier Metrics Cited ByInternal Medicine Residency Redesign: Proposal of the Internal Medicine Working GroupFaculty Development in Assessment: The Missing Link in Competency-Based Medical EducationInternal Medicine Residency Redesign: Time to Take StockMichael E. Whitcomb, MDThe 4∶1 Schedule: A Novel Template for Internal Medicine ResidenciesEducation First: Reforming the First-Year Curriculum of the Internal Medicine ResidencyRedesigning Residency Training in Internal Medicine: The Consensus Report of the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine Education Redesign Task ForceRedesigning Training for Internal MedicineSteven E. Weinberger, MD, Lawrence G. Smith, MD, and Virginia U. Collier, MDCareer Changes in Medicine: Part IIHarold C. Sox, MD, Editor 20 June 2006Volume 144, Issue 12Page: 938-939KeywordsFearForecastingGraduate medical educationHospital medicineInpatientsResidencySub-specialty careTraditional medicineVeteran careVision ePublished: 20 June 2006 Issue Published: 20 June 2006 CopyrightCopyright © 2006 by American College of Physicians. All Rights Reserved.PDF DownloadLoading ...

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