A progressive three-phase innovation to medical education in the United States

The practice of medicine has changed greatly over the past 100 years, yet the structure of undergraduate medical education has evolved very little. Many schools have modified their curricula to incorporate problem-based learning and organ systems-based curricula, but few schools have adequately addr...

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Main Author: Cory M. Pfeifer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Medical Education Online
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2018.1427988
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spelling doaj-a18f48cde4c7470c919fe6ded1c710522020-11-25T01:31:57ZengTaylor & Francis GroupMedical Education Online1087-29812018-01-0123110.1080/10872981.2018.14279881427988A progressive three-phase innovation to medical education in the United StatesCory M. Pfeifer0University of Texas Southwestern Medical CenterThe practice of medicine has changed greatly over the past 100 years, yet the structure of undergraduate medical education has evolved very little. Many schools have modified their curricula to incorporate problem-based learning and organ systems-based curricula, but few schools have adequately addressed rising tuition costs. Undergraduate medical education has become cost-prohibitive for students interested in primary care. In the meanwhile, the concept of a separate dedicated intern year is outdated and mired in waste despite remaining a requirement for several hospital-based and surgical specialties. Described here is an innovative approach to medical education which reduces tuition costs and maximizes efficiency, based on principals already employed by several schools. This integrated curriculum, first suggested by the author in 2010, keeps the current USMLE system in place, exposes medical students to patient care earlier, expands and incorporates the ‘intern’ year into a four-year medical training program, provides more time for students to decide on a specialty, and allows residency programs to acquire fully-licensed practitioners with greater clinical experience than the status quo. Abbreviations: MCAT: Medical college admission test; USMLE: US medical licensing examinationhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2018.1427988Accelerated medical curriculumeducational innovationundergraduate medical education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cory M. Pfeifer
spellingShingle Cory M. Pfeifer
A progressive three-phase innovation to medical education in the United States
Medical Education Online
Accelerated medical curriculum
educational innovation
undergraduate medical education
author_facet Cory M. Pfeifer
author_sort Cory M. Pfeifer
title A progressive three-phase innovation to medical education in the United States
title_short A progressive three-phase innovation to medical education in the United States
title_full A progressive three-phase innovation to medical education in the United States
title_fullStr A progressive three-phase innovation to medical education in the United States
title_full_unstemmed A progressive three-phase innovation to medical education in the United States
title_sort progressive three-phase innovation to medical education in the united states
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Medical Education Online
issn 1087-2981
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The practice of medicine has changed greatly over the past 100 years, yet the structure of undergraduate medical education has evolved very little. Many schools have modified their curricula to incorporate problem-based learning and organ systems-based curricula, but few schools have adequately addressed rising tuition costs. Undergraduate medical education has become cost-prohibitive for students interested in primary care. In the meanwhile, the concept of a separate dedicated intern year is outdated and mired in waste despite remaining a requirement for several hospital-based and surgical specialties. Described here is an innovative approach to medical education which reduces tuition costs and maximizes efficiency, based on principals already employed by several schools. This integrated curriculum, first suggested by the author in 2010, keeps the current USMLE system in place, exposes medical students to patient care earlier, expands and incorporates the ‘intern’ year into a four-year medical training program, provides more time for students to decide on a specialty, and allows residency programs to acquire fully-licensed practitioners with greater clinical experience than the status quo. Abbreviations: MCAT: Medical college admission test; USMLE: US medical licensing examination
topic Accelerated medical curriculum
educational innovation
undergraduate medical education
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2018.1427988
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