| Literature DB >> 28367396 |
Satoshi Yamamoto1, Pedro Tanaka2, Matias V Madsen3, Alex Macario2.
Abstract
Little has been published comparing the graduate medical education training structure and requirements across multiple countries. The goal of this study was to summarize and compare the characteristics of anesthesiology training programs in the USA, UK, Canada, Japan, Brazil, Denmark, and Switzerland as a way to better understand efforts to train anesthesiologists in different countries. Two physicians trained in each of the seven countries (convenience sample) were interviewed using a semi-structured approach. The interview was facilitated by use of a predetermined questionnaire that included, for example, the duration of post-medical school training and national requirements for certain rotations, a number of cases, faculty supervision, national in-training written exams, and duty hour limits. These data were augmented by review of each country's publicly available residency training documents as available on the internet. Post-medical school anesthesia residency duration varied: three years (Brazil), four years (USA), five years (Canada and Switzerland), six years (Japan and Denmark) to nine years (UK), as did the number of explicitly required clinical rotations of a defined duration: zero (Denmark), one (Switzerland and UK), four (Brazil), six (Canada), and 12 (USA). Minimum case requirements exist in the USA, Japan, and Brazil, but not in the other countries. National written exams taken during training exist for all countries studied except Japan and Denmark. The countries studied increasingly aim to have competency-based education with milestone assessments. Training duty hour limits also varied including for example 37 hours/week averaged over a one month with limitations on night duties (Denmark), a weekly average of 48 hours taken over a 17 week period (UK), 50 hours/week maximum (Switzerland), 60 hours/week maximum (Brazil), and 80 hours/week averaged over four weeks (USA). Some countries have highly structured training programs with multiple national requirements with training principally carried out at a home institution. Other countries have a more decentralized and unregulated approach with fewer (if any) specific case or rotation requirements, where the trainee creates his/her own customized training to meet broad objectives and goals. The countries studied have different national training requirements, unique duty hour rules and are at varying stages in transitioning to an outcome based model of residency.Entities:
Keywords: anesthesia; graduate medical education; in the world; residency; residency structure
Year: 2017 PMID: 28367396 PMCID: PMC5364083 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.1060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Residency program application process and training duration for each country
1. A mathematical computer algorithm to match an applicant to the program most preferred on that applicant’s rank order list.http://www.nrmp.org/match-process/match-algorithm/
2. The algorithm compares applicant and program rank order lists and matches applicants to programs based on both partie's stated preferences
3. http://www.carms.ca/en/residency/match-algorithm/ http://www.rcoa.ac.uk/training-and-the-training-programme/the-stages-of-training
| USA | UK | Canada | Japan | Brazil | Denmark | Switzerland | |
| Application process | Match1 | National application process for postgraduate foundation years one-two and then assigned deanery and hospital, then another similar national application for core and specialist anesthesia training | Match2 | Match for the first two years and application to institution for four-year anesthesia residency | Application to institution | Lottery pick for postgraduate year, application to separate institutions for postgraduate year 2, & then application for anesthesia residency in one of three regions in country | No specific residency programs. candidates put together own curriculum & apply for rotations at different teaching hospitals & make sure to meet all requirements |
| Written exam required to be admitted to residency | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N |
| Post medical school training duration (years) | one (internship) + three (anesthesia) | two (foundation years) + two (core anaesthesia) + two (intermediate) + three (higher (+/- advanced).3 | 1.5 (general medicine) + 3.5 (anesthesia) | two (general medicine) + four (anesthesia) | zero + three (anesthesia) | one (general medicine) + one (introductory anesthesia year) + four (anesthesia) | Minimum of five years |
| Total years post medical school | four | nine | five | six | three | six | five |
Overview of residency program structure
1. Voluntary, self-created elective experience can be proposed to program
2. http://acgme.org/acgmeweb/Portals/0/PDFs/Milestones/AnesthesiologyMilestones.pdf
3. Work Place Based Assessments as per http://www.rcoa.ac.uk/training-anaesthesia/rules-and-regulations-governing-training-%E2%80%93-the-curriculum
4. http://www.dasaim.dk/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Curriculum-for-Specialist-Training-in-Anaesthesiology-Core-Training-Programme.pdf
5. Every trainee must, at all times, be responsible to a nominated consultant. The consultant must be available to advise and assist the trainee as appropriate. Sometimes this will require the consultant’s immediate presence but on many occasions less direct involvement will be needed. Indirect supervision falls into three categories: local, distant and remote sites. Local supervision: The supervisor is usually within the theatre suite immediately available for advice and is able to be with the trainee within minutes of being called. Distant supervision: The supervisor is available rapidly for advice but is off the hospital site and/or separated from the trainee by over 10 minutes. Supervision in remote sites: any location in which it cannot be guaranteed that the help of another anaesthetist will be available. This may be either within or away from the base hospital (http://www.rcoa.ac.uk/system/files/TRG-CU-CCT-ANAES2010.pdf)
6. As more milestones achieved more autonomy allowed not requiring direct supervision
7. A non-mandatory in training test given by the Japan Organization of Advancing Medical Education Program is usually taken during PGYtwo before clinical anesthesia meant to evaluate medical knowledge and skills in general, not specific to anesthesia
8. The American Board of Anesthesiology offers the BASIC Examination at the end of the second postgraduate year, and a passing score is required to graduate residency.
9. While a resident may graduate from a residency program without being successful on their board exams (certification exams are written in the last year of training), they will not be conferred their (Fellow of The Royal College of Physicians of Canada) FRCPC designation, and thus they cannot work independently as an anesthesiologist in a major center
10. Includes the Basic written exam after postgraduate year two, the advanced written exam after finishing residency, and the applied exam thereafter which includes oral exams, and beginning in 2018 OSCEs (http://www.theaba.org/Exams/APPLIED-(Staged-Exam)/About-APPLIED-(Staged-Exam)
11. http://www.rcoa.ac.uk/training-and-the-training-programme/the-stages-of-training
12. Includes written, interview, and skill tests
13. Switzerland uses the Part I of the European Society of Anesthesiology European Diploma in Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care written exam, followed by a Swiss specific oral Exam
14. Board certification requirements are changing with the new system taking place in 2019
| USA | UK | Canada | Japan | Brazil | Denmark | Switzerland | |
| Electives (non-required clinical rotations available) | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y1 | Y |
| Competency Based Curriculum | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y |
| Milestones Based Assessment | Y2 | Y3 | N | N | N | Y4 | Y |
| Direct Faculty Supervision Required for All Years of Training | Y | N5 | Y | Y | Y | N6 | Y |
| National In-Training Written Exams | Y | Y | Y | N7 | Y | N | Y |
| Need to Pass Exam to Graduate Residency | Y8 | Y | N9 | N | N | N | N |
| Board Certification Test | Y10 | Y11 (Fellowship of the Royal College of Anaesthetists; after postgraduate year six) | Y | Y12 | Y | N | Y13 |
| Name of Residency Accreditation Organization | Academic Council of Graduate Medical Education | General Medical Council, Royal College of Anaesthetists | Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada | Japanese Medical Specially Board14 | Education Administration of Brazilian Society | National Board of Health | Swiss Society of Anesthesiology |
Overview of rotation and case requirements
Y=Yes, N=No
a. http://www.rcoa.ac.uk/training-and-the-training-programme/the-stages-of-training
b. Rotations with fixed duration are not required but nine general competencies (disease management, patient assessment and preoperative preparation, intraoperative care, postoperative patient care and pain management, resuscitation and emergency management, practical anesthetic procedures/skills, quality management and health economics, anesthesia non-technical skills, professionalism and ethics, and education, self-directed learning, research) and the eight specialty types listed in Table 2.
c. ACGME minimum required number of cases and procedures (https://www.acgme.org/Portals/0/PFAssets/ProgramRequirements/040_anesthesiology_2016.pdf)
Pediatrics (< three months old) = five, Pediatrics (< three years old) = 20, Pediatrics (< 12 years old) = 100, Spinal = 40, Epidural=40, Peripheral Nerve Block = 40, Life-Threatening Pathology = 20, Cardiac = 20, Intrathoracic Non-Cardiac = 20, Vascular Major Vessels = 20, Vaginal Delivery = 40, Cesarean Section = 20, Pain Evaluation – New Patient = 20, Intracerebral = 20, Intracerebral Open = 11.
d. Pediatric (< six yrs), 25 cases; cesareans, 10 cases; cardiovascular, 25 cases; thoracic, 25 cases; neurosurgery, 25 cases
e. According to regulation of education and training centers -2016- Brazilian Society of Anesthesiologists: I- Pre and postoperative: minimum of 10% of the annual workload for pre-anesthetic evaluation (preoperative assessment clinic and pre-anesthetic evaluation), post-anesthetic evaluation, treatment of postoperative pain and acute and chronic pain syndromes;II - Intensive care unit and emergency department: minimum of 15% of the annual workload; III- Elective anesthesia, diagnostic and therapeutic services: minimum of 45% of the annual workload; IV-obstetrics: minimum of 10% of the annual workload; V-elective rotations: cardiology, pulmonology, neurology, clinical pathology laboratory, physiology lab, pharmacology laboratory, experimental surgery and transfusion medicine or others at the discretion of the institution. It is also mandatory anesthetic procedures for general surgery, obstetrics and children age between zero-12 years and also to do at least three of the following surgical specialties: proctology, vascular surgery peripheral, orthopedics and traumatology, gynecology, otolaryngology, ophthalmology, urology, diagnostic tests, thoracic-lung surgery and neurosurgery. Provide a minimum of 440 anesthetic acts or 900 annual hours of practical training in anesthesia for each resident, covering mandatorily anesthetic procedures for general surgery, obstetrics and children zero-12 years and also to at least three of the following specialties surgical: proctology, peripheral vascular surgery, orthopedics and traumatology, gynecology, otolaryngology, ophthalmology, urology, diagnostic tests, thoracic-lung surgery and neurosurgery
| USA | UK | Canada | Japan | Brazil | Denmark | Switzerland | |
| Rotation requirements | Y | Ya | Y | N | Y | Y | Yb |
| Case Number Requirements | Yc | N | N | Yd | Ye | N | N |
Duty hour limit requirements
^http://www.rcoa.ac.uk/careers-and-training/working-time-regulations
^^The Labor Standards Act applies for all workers in general and limits are eight hours a day, 40 hours a week in total. Many medical residencies may not be compliant. Resident overtime is controlled by the agreement for overtime work regulation: overtime is allowed within 45 hours per month, 360 hours per year.
^^^In some departments, trainees may work more than 37 hours, but the extra hours are either paid times one and a half or they will get the time off in the next period.
| USA | UK | Canada | Japan | Brazil | Denmark | Switzerland |
| 80 hr/week, averaged over four weeks; one day off/week; 10 hours off between shifts | Weekly average of 48 hours taken over a 17 week period^ | 24 hours for a single call shift and no more than seven call shifts every 28 days. Varies from province to province. In Alberta, call shifts can be up to 26 hours. Call shifts are limited to 16 hours in Quebec. | Yes^^ | 60 hours/week | 37 hours/week averaged over a one month (national labor law for all employees), with limitations on night duties^^^ | 50 hrs per week maximum |
Rotation requirements with specified duration in months (if cell in Table is empty no requirement exists)
*The UK has ‘core specialty’ requirements, but apart from ICU do not need to be accomplished in dedicated blocks
** Rotation periods are not clearly specified. To match milestone based targets, many resident programs provide rotation periods for OB, Ped, Cardiac, Neuro and Thoracic
***no duration specified as milestones based
# These are “specific core competencies” of the Swiss catalogue of objectives in anesthesia and reanimation. No duration is specified. In smaller hospitals the experience may not be separate rotations as residents perform samples cases in each of the domains. In bigger hospitals such as University Hospitals, cardiac anesthesia, pediatric anesthesia, neuroanesthesia, prehospital emergency, and pain service may be separate rotations
| USA | UK* | Canada | Japan** | Brazil | Denmark*** | Switzerland# | |
| OB | two | Yes | two | one | Yes | Yes | |
| Pediatrics | two | Yes | three | one | Yes | Yes | |
| Cardiac | two | Yes | one | Yes | |||
| Neuro | two | Yes | Yes | ||||
| Pain Service | three | Yes | one | Yes | |||
| ICU | four | nine | three | Yes | six | ||
| Acute Pain | one | Yes | |||||
| Chronic Pain | one | Yes | one | Yes | |||
| Regional | one | Yes | |||||
| Pre-op | 0.5 | ||||||
| PACU | 0.5 | ||||||
| General Anesthesia | Yes | 12 | |||||
| Adult Internal Medicine | Yes | six | |||||
| Thoracic | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||
| ENT | Yes | Yes | Yes (Airway surgery/management) | ||||
| Ophthalmic | Yes | ||||||
| Vascular | Yes | Yes | |||||
| Orthopedic | Yes | Yes | |||||
| Trauma | Yes | Yes | |||||
| Emergency Medicine | Yes | ||||||
| Anesthesia outside OR | 0.5 | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||
| Abdominal surgery | Yes | Yes | |||||
| Ambulatory | Yes | Yes | |||||
| Gynecologic | Yes | Yes |