The evidence suggests that later timing is bad for career decisions regarding
family medicine.
Schools in the US such as Mercer with emphasis on family medicine do their
family medicine first of all of their clinical rotations. It makes a nice
transition between the first two years and the last two clinical years. At
Nebraska we had our two month Rural Preceptorship in the fourth year, but grew
tired of students telling us that it came too late to influence their decision.
We moved it to the third year a few years ago and feel that this has helped us
to some degree. We also added a 3 week experience at the end of the first
medical school year as well as significant presence throughout the first two
years.
You must resist a decrease in length or a delay in the curriculum with all that
you can bear on the situation. You must somehow increase your influence in all
years of training, especially the earlier years. Research that may help you, if
available, would be when in the curriculum students make decisions on their
future career. This is AAMC data from 1995 on the 294 US senior medical students
interested in rural practice compared to the responses of the other 13000. The
figures for family medicine are a bit different if someone can add them to the
discussion.
|
When did you decide on your specialty? |
Rural % | All % |
|
Before med school |
30.6 |
14.9 |
|
First year |
5.8 |
3.7 |
|
Second year |
5.4 |
4.8 |
|
Third year |
30.6 |
45.5 |
|
Fourth year |
18 |
23.9 |
Also, Tom Bruce in his book, Improving Rural Health, noted that the State of
Arkansas basically had twice as much gain in the ration of physicians to
population from 1975 to 1979 when compared to states throughout the south and
midwest and at 18% growth, had the 5th largest growth of any state in the
nation. States with comparable efforts had tremendous population growth (marked
with #), significant primary care efforts (marked with *), or both. From P 168
See
http://www.unmc.edu/Community/ruralmeded/model/medsch/arkansas_approach.htm
A June 1983 report by US Dept of Health and Human Services on Diffusion and the
Changing Geographic Distribution of Primary Care Physicians noted that Arkansas
had the 4th largest increase in PC docs in the nation at 22% and a higher ratio
of office-based pc docs when compared to the entire southern US. At the starting
point, Arkansas had the most depleted supply of physicians in the nation p 164
| State | Number of Office-Based PC MDs/DOs | PC Ratio to Population | Percent change | ||
| 1975 | 1979 | 1975 | 1979 | ||
| Arkansas | 729 | 906 | 34 | 40 | 18 * |
| Georgia | 1690 | 1980 | 34 | 36 | 6 |
| Iowa | 1365 | 1633 | 48 | 56 | 17 * |
| Louisiana | 1253 | 1436 | 33 | 34 | 3 |
| Michigan | 5296 | 6271 | 58 | 68 | 17 # * |
| Minnesota | 1873 | 2179 | 48 | 53 | 10 * |
| Mississippi | 723 | 861 | 31 | 34 | 10 |
| Missouri | 2518 | 2965 | 53 | 60 | 13 * |
| Oklahoma | 1306 | 1652 | 48 | 55 | 15 * |
| Tennessee | 1405 | 1695 | 34 | 37 | 9 |
Searching on James Rourke and SWORM would give you further data from a Canadian
perspective. The Australians have also made major inroads into this area as
well.
Robert C. Bowman, M.D, Co-Chairman
Rural Medical Educators Group of the National Rural Health Association
UNMC Department of Family Medicine Director of Rural Health Education and
Research
983075 Nebraska Medical Center
Omaha, NE 68198-3075
(402) 559-8873 or fax at -8118
Email: rbowman@unmc.edu
http://www.ruralmedicaleducation.org or
http://www.unmc.edu/Community/ruralmeded/
Dear Mark and Carol:
I hope all is well with you, we are fine, as you know the news probably look
worse from the outside.
I wanted to consult with you regarding the issue of family medicine rounds. As
you know the Israeli medical program is 6 years, the first three years are
preclinical and the latter are the clinical years where the clinical rounds take
place in the different hospital departments.
Up till now the round in family medicine has been 6 weeks long during the fifth
year, after the clinical rounds in internal medicine and pediatrics, before
psychiatry and surgery. Our feeling has been that this works well and that the
yield of students continuing for a residency in family medicine has also
increased.
As part of the revision plan of the medical school it is now suggested to change
the family medicine round to the sixth year (the final year) before all the
elective rounds and after completion of all the hospital rounds.
I would appreciate it if you could inform me what is the practice in your
respective medical schools and its length and what is your opinion on the
changes suggested.
My concerns (from our previous experience when the family medicine round took
place in the sixth year) are that the students arrive at the end of the road
without a message that family medicine obtains a specific body of knowledge,
when this might affect their choice in choosing a specialty in the future.
As the final meeting regarding this issue is this coming Thursday, any input
would be appreciated.
Thank you in advance.
Best regards, Pesach Shvartzman
Prof. Pesach Shvartzman
Chairman, Division of Community Health
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
POB 653
Beer-Sheva, 84105
Israel
Tel: 972-8-6477429/30
Fax: 972-8-6477636
Email: spesah@bgumail.bgu.ac.il
Stephan:
Do you have any "evidence" for the data you gave regarding:
1) "Late entry of students into family medicine clerkships does not produce
family docs", and
2) "Schools in the US that have the best rate of producing family docs tend
to have early clerkships in family medicine"...
Could others comment in "strategies" to produce more family doctors (an
interest in my institution), like the ones from Kirksville College of
Osteopathic Medicine commented by Stephan?
Thanks,
Howard
Howard Tandeter <howard@BGUMAIL.BGU.AC.IL>
**************************
Howard Tandeter, MD
Department of Family Medicine
Ben-Gurion University,
Beer-Sheva
Israel
Howard:
The following article concluded that instituting third year clerkships resulted
in an "immediate, significant increase" in the number of students selecting
family medicine, whereas simply starting a Department of Family Medicine did
not.
Campos-Outcalt D, Senf J.A longitudinal, national study of the effect of
implementing a required third-year family practice clerkship or a department of
family medicine on the selection of family medicine by medical students. Acad
Med 1999 Sep;74(9):1016-20
Stephen
Stephen L. McKernan, ND, DO, FAAFP
Director, Family Practice Residency Program
Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine
800 West Jefferson Street
Kirksville, MO 63501
(660) 626-2637
Fax (660) 626-2922
smckernan@kcom.edu