Increasing Trends in Orthopedic Fellowships Are Not due to Inadequate Residency Training

Orthopedic residents have one of the highest fellowship participation rates among medical specialities and there are growing concerns that inadequate residency training may be contributing to this trend. Therefore, a mixed-exploratory research survey was distributed to all 148 graduating Canadian or...

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Main Authors: K. A. Almansoori, M. Clark
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2015-01-01
Series:Education Research International
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/191470
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spelling doaj-15c9dc65ddb4434ca98412ea76b056612020-11-24T22:57:52ZengHindawi LimitedEducation Research International2090-40022090-40102015-01-01201510.1155/2015/191470191470Increasing Trends in Orthopedic Fellowships Are Not due to Inadequate Residency TrainingK. A. Almansoori0M. Clark1Department of Educational Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2G5, CanadaDivision of Orthopaedic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, T2N 4N1, CanadaOrthopedic residents have one of the highest fellowship participation rates among medical specialities and there are growing concerns that inadequate residency training may be contributing to this trend. Therefore, a mixed-exploratory research survey was distributed to all 148 graduating Canadian orthopedic residents to investigate their perceptions and attitudes for pursuing fellowships. A response rate of 33% (n=49) was obtained with the majority of residents undertaking one (27%) or two (60%) fellowships. Surgical-skill development was reported as the most common motivating factor, followed by employment and marketability; malpractice protection and financial reasons were the least relevant. The overwhelming majority of residents (94%, n=46) felt adequately prepared by their residency training for independent general practice, and 84% (n=41) of respondents did not feel that current fellowship trends were due to poor residency training. Three common themes were expressed in their comments: the growing perceived expectation by healthcare professionals and employers to be fellowship-certified, the integration of fellowship training into the surgical education hierarchy, and the failure of residency training curriculums to accommodate for this trend. In conclusion, Canadian orthopedic residents are confident of their residency training and are increasingly pursuing fellowships to primarily develop their surgical skills and expertise.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/191470
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K. A. Almansoori
M. Clark
spellingShingle K. A. Almansoori
M. Clark
Increasing Trends in Orthopedic Fellowships Are Not due to Inadequate Residency Training
Education Research International
author_facet K. A. Almansoori
M. Clark
author_sort K. A. Almansoori
title Increasing Trends in Orthopedic Fellowships Are Not due to Inadequate Residency Training
title_short Increasing Trends in Orthopedic Fellowships Are Not due to Inadequate Residency Training
title_full Increasing Trends in Orthopedic Fellowships Are Not due to Inadequate Residency Training
title_fullStr Increasing Trends in Orthopedic Fellowships Are Not due to Inadequate Residency Training
title_full_unstemmed Increasing Trends in Orthopedic Fellowships Are Not due to Inadequate Residency Training
title_sort increasing trends in orthopedic fellowships are not due to inadequate residency training
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Education Research International
issn 2090-4002
2090-4010
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Orthopedic residents have one of the highest fellowship participation rates among medical specialities and there are growing concerns that inadequate residency training may be contributing to this trend. Therefore, a mixed-exploratory research survey was distributed to all 148 graduating Canadian orthopedic residents to investigate their perceptions and attitudes for pursuing fellowships. A response rate of 33% (n=49) was obtained with the majority of residents undertaking one (27%) or two (60%) fellowships. Surgical-skill development was reported as the most common motivating factor, followed by employment and marketability; malpractice protection and financial reasons were the least relevant. The overwhelming majority of residents (94%, n=46) felt adequately prepared by their residency training for independent general practice, and 84% (n=41) of respondents did not feel that current fellowship trends were due to poor residency training. Three common themes were expressed in their comments: the growing perceived expectation by healthcare professionals and employers to be fellowship-certified, the integration of fellowship training into the surgical education hierarchy, and the failure of residency training curriculums to accommodate for this trend. In conclusion, Canadian orthopedic residents are confident of their residency training and are increasingly pursuing fellowships to primarily develop their surgical skills and expertise.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/191470
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