Thursday, October 08, 2009

Medical education

The Sept 23/30 (v302, n.12) of JAMA is on medical education. Just a few items gleaned to throw into the health care mix and to ponder whether universal health care will help or hurt medical care.
  • Up to 60% of practicing physicians report symptoms of burnout, defined as emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and low sense of accomplishment.

  • Physicians can now get CMEs for "mindful meditation," i.e. learning to pay attention and listen.

  • 60% of the schools that responded to a survey on web 2.0 reported medical students were posting unprofessionally online.

  • Although medical educators have been working on better feedback for 25 years, learners still complain. There seems to be evidence that physicians overestimate their abilities.

  • There is little evidence that continuing medical education improves practicing physicians' clinical reasoning and the quality of care. Electronic sources aren't too great either.

  • Getting information faster doesn't mean you remember it. There are two types of memory--verbatim and gist. As we age, our verbatim box is less accessible so we rely more on the gist box.

  • It seems medical schools aren't doing a great job of teaching doctors about health care for people with disabilities. The report was issued in 2005 so I assume the research pre-dates that. And since those goals weren't met, bigger better larger and more expensive goals are suggested.
As I found out from my years in academe, educators are terrific at setting goals; not so great at solving problems. I think you get money for setting goals. Not so much for solving problems.

2 comments:

Term Papers said...

I'm been looking for topics as interesting as this. Looking forward to your next post.

Term Papers said...

Thanks for share this information, i really didn't know about that, will get advantage from this,Thanks for share this.