Core clerkship directors: their current resources and the rewards of the role

To conduct a national multidisciplinary investigation assessing core clinical clerkships and their directors, variances in resources from national guidelines, and the impact of the clerkship director role on faculty members' academic productivity, advancement, and satisfaction. A multidisciplin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic Medicine 2010-04, Vol.85 (4), p.710-715
Hauptverfasser: Ephgrave, Kimberly, Margo, Katherine L, White, Christopher, Hammoud, Maya, Brodkey, Amy, Painter, Thomas, Juel, Vern C, Shaw, Darlene, Ferguson, Kristi
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container_end_page 715
container_issue 4
container_start_page 710
container_title Academic Medicine
container_volume 85
creator Ephgrave, Kimberly
Margo, Katherine L
White, Christopher
Hammoud, Maya
Brodkey, Amy
Painter, Thomas
Juel, Vern C
Shaw, Darlene
Ferguson, Kristi
description To conduct a national multidisciplinary investigation assessing core clinical clerkships and their directors, variances in resources from national guidelines, and the impact of the clerkship director role on faculty members' academic productivity, advancement, and satisfaction. A multidisciplinary working group of the Alliance for Clinical Education (ACE), representing all seven core clinical disciplines, created and distributed a survey to clerkship directors at 125 U.S. MD-granting medical schools, in academic year 2006-2007. A total of 544 clerkship directors from Internal Medicine (96), Family Medicine (91), Psychiatry, (91), Pediatrics (79), Surgery (71), Neurology (60), and Obstetrics-Gynecology (56) responded, representing over 60% of U.S. core clinical clerkships. The clerkship directors were similar across disciplines in demographics and academic productivity, though clinical and clerkship activities varied. Departmental staff support for clerkships averaged 0.69 people, distinctly less than the ACE's 2003 guideline of a full-time coordinator in all disciplines' clerkships. Clerkship directors reported heavy clinical responsibilities, which, as in previous studies, were negatively related to academic productivity. However, many clerkship directors felt the role enhanced their academic advancement; a large majority felt it significantly enhanced their career satisfaction. The resources and rewards of the clerkship director role were similar across disciplines. Expectations of clerkship directors were considerable, including responsibility for clinical material and the learning environment. Resources for many fall short of those stated in the ACE guidelines, particularly regarding support staff. However, the findings indicate that the clerkship director role can have benefits for academic advancement and strongly enhances career satisfaction.
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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid LWW Legacy Archive; Journals@Ovid Ovid Autoload; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Clinical Clerkship - organization & administration
Clinical Competence
Education, Medical, Undergraduate - organization & administration
Humans
Middle Aged
Physician Executives
Retrospective Studies
Specialization
Surveys and Questionnaires
United States
title Core clerkship directors: their current resources and the rewards of the role
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