T. Fyfe, R. Akins, P. Gagné, Craig E. Cheifetz, Sarina S. Petrocelly, G. W. Payne
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Articles were included in the review if they discussed undergraduate medical education in allopathic schools in Northern America (US and Canada), were written in English and related to regional medical campuses. Each article was reviewed and assessed by two of the authors, and information extracted from the literature was thematically analyzed. \nResults \nFifty (50) articles were selected for inclusion in the final review. All selected articles fit the definition of Regional Medical Campus developed by the Association of American Medical Colleges’ Group on Regional Medical Campuses (GRMC). The GRMC has defined that RMCs could be of four distinct types: basic science campuses, where students study pre-clinical (basic sciences) courses; clinical campuses, where clerkship training is completed; longitudinal model (for example, Longitudinal Integrated Clerkships) and, usually 4-year campuses, where both pre-clinical and clinical curriculum is delivered. Thirty-six (36) of the reviewed articles (72%) specifically stated that the development of RMCs was in response to the physician shortage and limited access to healthcare in rural areas. Twenty-five (25) articles discussed program models that spanned both basic science and clinical curricula. Of the 50 articles that were included in the final review, 15 (30%) utilized descriptive methodology, and 35 (70%) involved quantitative, qualitative or mixed methods research, with some being considered “program evaluations.” Four major themes emerged from the reviewed articles: workforce, social accountability, distributed medical education, and regional versus main campus settings. \nConclusion \nThis study is the first comprehensive literature review of publications on Regional Medical Campuses and thus provides a benchmark and direction for future research in the RMCs topic area.","PeriodicalId":92811,"journal":{"name":"Journal of regional medical campuses","volume":"105 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-06-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Regional Medical Campuses in Canada and the United States: A Systematic Review\",\"authors\":\"T. 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引用次数: 5
摘要
北美地区医学校园(RMCs)的发展是为了响应增加本科医学生入学率的呼吁,通过解决服务不足和农村地区医生短缺的问题,满足社会对医疗保健的需求。我们研究了美国和加拿大本科生rmc的文献,以确定研究类型和主要主题。方法在Medline OVIDSP、循证医学评论OVIDSP、CINAHL EBSCO、ERIC EBSCO、PsycInfo EBSCO和Web of Science ISI数据库中进行文献检索。如果文章讨论了北美(美国和加拿大)对抗疗法学校的本科医学教育,用英文撰写,并与地区医学院有关,则纳入本综述。每篇文章都由两位作者进行审查和评估,并对从文献中提取的信息进行主题分析。结果50篇文章入选终评。所有入选的文章都符合美国医学院校协会区域医学校园小组(GRMC)对区域医学校园的定义。GRMC将rmc定义为四种不同的类型:基础科学校园,学生在这里学习临床前(基础科学)课程;临床校园,完成见习培训;纵向模式(例如纵向综合实习),通常是4年制的校园,在那里提供临床前和临床课程。在回顾的文章中,有36篇(72%)明确指出,农村医疗管理中心的发展是为了应对农村地区医生短缺和医疗服务有限的问题。25篇文章讨论了跨越基础科学和临床课程的项目模式。在最终评审的50篇文章中,15篇(30%)使用了描述性方法,35篇(70%)涉及定量、定性或混合方法研究,其中一些被认为是“项目评估”。从回顾的文章中出现了四个主要主题:劳动力、社会责任、分布式医学教育和区域与主要校园设置。结论本研究首次对区域医学校园的出版物进行了全面的文献综述,为未来区域医学校园的研究提供了一个基准和方向。
Regional Medical Campuses in Canada and the United States: A Systematic Review
Introduction
The development of Regional Medical Campuses (RMCs) in Northern America has been a response to the call to increase undergraduate medical student enrollment and meet the societal needs of healthcare access by addressing physician shortages in underserved and in rural areas. We studied the literature on undergraduate RMCs in US and Canada to identify types of studies and leading themes.
Methods
Literature searches were performed within the following databases: Medline OVIDSP, Evidence-Based Medicine Reviews OVIDSP, CINAHL EBSCO, ERIC EBSCO, PsycInfo EBSCO, and Web of Science ISI. Articles were included in the review if they discussed undergraduate medical education in allopathic schools in Northern America (US and Canada), were written in English and related to regional medical campuses. Each article was reviewed and assessed by two of the authors, and information extracted from the literature was thematically analyzed.
Results
Fifty (50) articles were selected for inclusion in the final review. All selected articles fit the definition of Regional Medical Campus developed by the Association of American Medical Colleges’ Group on Regional Medical Campuses (GRMC). The GRMC has defined that RMCs could be of four distinct types: basic science campuses, where students study pre-clinical (basic sciences) courses; clinical campuses, where clerkship training is completed; longitudinal model (for example, Longitudinal Integrated Clerkships) and, usually 4-year campuses, where both pre-clinical and clinical curriculum is delivered. Thirty-six (36) of the reviewed articles (72%) specifically stated that the development of RMCs was in response to the physician shortage and limited access to healthcare in rural areas. Twenty-five (25) articles discussed program models that spanned both basic science and clinical curricula. Of the 50 articles that were included in the final review, 15 (30%) utilized descriptive methodology, and 35 (70%) involved quantitative, qualitative or mixed methods research, with some being considered “program evaluations.” Four major themes emerged from the reviewed articles: workforce, social accountability, distributed medical education, and regional versus main campus settings.
Conclusion
This study is the first comprehensive literature review of publications on Regional Medical Campuses and thus provides a benchmark and direction for future research in the RMCs topic area.