PURPOSE: Medical education reform has been the clarion call of U.S. medical educators and policymakers for two decades. To foster change and seed reform, Harvard Medical School created a professional development program for physicians and scientists actively engaged in educating future physicians that sought to transform both participants and their schools. This study focused on identifying the long-term effects of a professional development program on physician educators. METHOD: A follow-up survey of the 1995-97 cohorts of the Harvard Macy Program for Physician Educators was conducted by sending the 99 program participants a questionnaire two years after their participation. Main outcome measures studied were individual changes as reflected in participants' self-reported shifts in teaching behaviors, academic productivity, career advancement, and sense of commitment. RESULTS: A total of 63 participants completed the questionnaire, for a response rate of 63.6%. Two years following participation in the program, a majority (88.8%) of respondents reported that participation had significantly affected their professional development, including long-term changes in teaching behaviors (77.8%), engagement in new educational activities from committee work (86%) to grant funding (52.4%), and renewed vitality/identification of themselves as educators. CONCLUSIONS: Long-term follow-up of participants enrolled in an intensive program for physician educators suggests that professional development programs that create an immersion experience designed in a high-challenge, high-support environment, emphasizing experiential and participatory activities can change behaviors in significant ways, and that these changes endure over time.
PURPOSE: Medical education reform has been the clarion call of U.S. medical educators and policymakers for two decades. To foster change and seed reform, Harvard Medical School created a professional development program for physicians and scientists actively engaged in educating future physicians that sought to transform both participants and their schools. This study focused on identifying the long-term effects of a professional development program on physician educators. METHOD: A follow-up survey of the 1995-97 cohorts of the Harvard Macy Program for Physician Educators was conducted by sending the 99 program participants a questionnaire two years after their participation. Main outcome measures studied were individual changes as reflected in participants' self-reported shifts in teaching behaviors, academic productivity, career advancement, and sense of commitment. RESULTS: A total of 63 participants completed the questionnaire, for a response rate of 63.6%. Two years following participation in the program, a majority (88.8%) of respondents reported that participation had significantly affected their professional development, including long-term changes in teaching behaviors (77.8%), engagement in new educational activities from committee work (86%) to grant funding (52.4%), and renewed vitality/identification of themselves as educators. CONCLUSIONS: Long-term follow-up of participants enrolled in an intensive program for physician educators suggests that professional development programs that create an immersion experience designed in a high-challenge, high-support environment, emphasizing experiential and participatory activities can change behaviors in significant ways, and that these changes endure over time.
Authors: Staci M Lee; Mark C Lee; Darcy A Reed; Andrew J Halvorsen; Elie F Berbari; Furman S McDonald; Thomas J Beckman Journal: J Grad Med Educ Date: 2014-12
Authors: Amy M Sullivan; Matthew D Lakoma; J Andrew Billings; Antoinette S Peters; Susan D Block Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2006-09 Impact factor: 5.128
Authors: Amy M Knight; Karan A Cole; David E Kern; L Randol Barker; Ken Kolodner; Scott M Wright Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2005-08 Impact factor: 5.128
Authors: Shari A Whicker; Deborah L Engle; Saumil Chudgar; Stephen DeMeo; Sarah M Bean; Aditee P Narayan; Colleen O'Connor Grochowski; Alisa Nagler Journal: Med Educ Online Date: 2016-07-29
Authors: Donna M Windish; Aysegul Gozu; Eric B Bass; Patricia A Thomas; Stephen D Sisson; Donna M Howard; David E Kern Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2007-02-23 Impact factor: 5.128