Published online January 3, 2005
PEDIATRICS Vol. 115 No. 1 January 2005, pp. 193 (doi:10.1542/peds.2004-2025)
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A Time for Change—of Residency and Beyond!

Leslie L. Barton, MD
Department of Pediatrics,
University of Arizona,
Tucson, AZ 85724

To the Editor.—

I read with more than passing interest the thoughtful article by Sectish et al.1 As a pediatric residency program director for ~14 years, I have been actively involved in all aspects of resident training. Our program, as have all others, has undergone (and continues to undergo) both mandated and nonmandated, albeit necessary, changes in curriculum, duty hours, and conditions of the workplace(s). My quibble with both this article and others recently published is with the limited arena that has been adopted for change. Although the authors acknowledge the difficulties of attracting graduating students to primary care fields such as family medicine and pediatrics and point out "the advantages [of other areas that offer]...higher income or better lifestyle," they do not go beyond suggesting change in residency programs. This is fallacious to me. Nine years ago we published a study of stress in pediatric faculty and expressed our concerns regarding the future well-being of medical academia.2 Data published subsequently point to major shortages in pediatric subspecialties (eg, endocrinology, neurology). The regulation of housestaff duty hours and need for observation and detailed documentation of competencies and professionalism impose even more stress on general and subspecialty faculty and further decrease time for academic pursuits and rewards, both tangible and intangible, that follow. This model is not one that our trainees will readily emulate. It is time to look beyond residency and mandate "transformation" of the workplace for all involved, for the good of physicians and their patients alike.

REFERENCES

  1. Sectish TC, Zalneraitis EL, Carraccio C, Behrman RE. The state of pediatrics residency training: a period of transformation of graduate medical education. Pediatrics. 2004;114 :832 –841[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Barton LL, Friedman AD, Locke CJ. Stress in pediatric faculty. Results of a national survey. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 1995;149 :751 –757[Abstract/Free Full Text]

PEDIATRICS (ISSN 1098-4275). ©2005 by the American Academy of Pediatrics

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Related articles in Pediatrics:

A Time for Change—of Residency and Beyond!: In Reply
Theodore C. Sectish, Edwin L. Zalneraitis, Carol Carraccio, and Richard E. Behrman
Pediatrics 2005 115: 193. [Extract] [Full Text]  




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