| Literature DB >> 31913812 |
Aaron N Leetch1, Joshua A Glasser1, Dale P Woolridge1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Three pathways are available to students considering a pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) career: pediatric residency followed by PEM fellowship (Peds-PEM); emergency medicine residency followed by PEM fellowship (EM-PEM); and combined EM and pediatrics residency (EM&Peds). Questions regarding differences between the training pathways are common among medical students. We present a comparative analysis of training pathways highlighting major curricular differences to aid in students' understanding of these training options.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31913812 PMCID: PMC6948678 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2019.10.44466
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) curricular requirements for pediatric emergency medicine pathways.
| Pathway | Required EUs per ACGME Guidelines | |
|---|---|---|
| EM&Peds | General pediatric requirements:
3 pediatric emergency department and acute illness 1 developmental-behavioral 1 adolescent medicine 1 term newborn 5 inpatient pediatrics 2 ambulatory experiences 2 neonatal intensive care 2 pediatric intensive care 7 pediatric subspecialty | Emergency medicine requirements:
4 critical care 5 pediatric emergency department |
| Peds-PEM | General pediatrics requirements as above plus:
12 pediatric-only emergency department 4 adult emergency medicine, including 1 adult trauma, 1 emergency medical services, 1 toxicology | |
| EM-PEM | General emergency medicine requirements as above plus:
12 pediatric-only emergency department 4 pediatric training; including 1 ambulatory pediatrics, 1 care of critically ill neonates, 1 care of critically ill children | |
EU, educational units defined as 1 month or 1 block in a 13-block/year schedule; Peds-PEM, pediatrics-pediatric emergency medicine fellowship; EM-PEM, emergency medicine-pediatric emergency medicine; EM&Peds, combined emergency medicine and pediatrics residency.
Results of average educational units (EU) in each pathway according to published curricula.
| Pathway | Peds-PEM (n=64) | EM-PEM (n=29) | EM&Peds (n=4) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total ED | 20.4 (17 – 34) | 35.4 (32.8 – 40.8) | 26.1 (23.5 – 31.5) |
| Pediatric-only ED | 20.1 (16 – 31) | 18.3 (14 – 22) | 8.0 (6 – 10) |
| Critical care | 5.8 (4 – 8) | 6.5 (4 –9) | 10.0 (8 – 12) |
| Research | 9.0 (1 – 15) | 3.3 (1 – 8) | 0.3 (0 – 1) |
Peds-PEM, pediatrics-pediatric emergency medicine fellowship; EM-PEM, emergency medicine-pediatric emergency medicine; EM&Peds, combined emergency medicine and pediatrics residency; ED, emergency department.
Strengths and potential limitations of training pathways in pediatric emergency medicine.
| Characteristics | Peds-PEM | EM-PEM | EM&Peds |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duration of training | 6 years | 5–6 years | 5 years |
| Training methodology | General pediatric residency with PEM fellowship | EM residency with PEM fellowship | Simultaneous EM and general pediatric residency |
| NRMP cycles | 2 | 2 | 1 |
| Training focus by curriculum | Research pediatric ED | General ED | General pediatrics |
| Primary board eligibility | General pediatrics | Emergency medicine | General pediatrics and emergency medicine |
| PEM Sub-board eligible? | Yes | Yes | No |
| Can care for adults? | No | Yes | Yes |
| Ambulatory or hospitalist potential? | Both | Neither | Both |
EM, emergency medicine; PEM, pediatric emergency medicine; Peds-PEM, pediatrics-pediatric emergency medicine fellowship; EM-PEM, emergency medicine-pediatric emergency medicine; EM&Peds, combined emergency medicine and pediatrics residency; NRMP, National Residency Match Program.