The Changing Pool of International Medical Graduates Seeking Certification Training in US Graduate Medical Education Programs
International medical graduates (IMGs) consistently represent approximately one fourth of both the physician workforce and the graduate medical education (GME) population of the United States. To enter into accredited US GME programs, IMGs must be certified by the Educational Commission for Foreign...
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Veröffentlicht in: | JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2002-09, Vol.288 (9), p.1079-1084 |
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Zusammenfassung: | International medical graduates (IMGs) consistently represent approximately
one fourth of both the physician workforce and the graduate medical education
(GME) population of the United States. To enter into accredited US GME programs,
IMGs must be certified by the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates
(ECFMG). Changes in the number and characteristics of those seeking certification
directly affect the GME population and the future physician workforce in the
United States. In July 1998, in response to concerns that IMGs might be lacking
in basic clinical skills (eg, history taking, physical examinations, communicating
with patients in spoken English), the ECFMG initiated a requirement that IMGs
pass a clinical skills assessment (CSA) to achieve ECFMG certification. In
this study we examined the pool of IMGs seeking certification, using databases
reporting on all individuals beginning the certification process from 1995
through 2001. For this period, we found that the number of IMG candidates
taking the Step 1 examination decreased by 45.5% (36 983 vs 16 828),
and the number of IMGs registered to take Step 2 decreased by 38.1% (31 751
vs 12 122). The number of ECFMG certificates issued annually decreased,
from a range of 9000 to 12000 (1995-1998) to fewer than 6000 (1999-2001).
Although the number of IMGs annually seeking and receiving certification has
decreased, the quality of the applicants appears to have improved and the
number of IMGs certified annually continues to adequately fill GME positions
not taken by US medical graduates. |
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ISSN: | 0098-7484 1538-3598 |
DOI: | 10.1001/jama.288.9.1079 |