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Biro, Frank M.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1990
A survey of all 1987 graduates (n=112) of all U.S. combined programs found patient care as the major current involvement, with most subjects seeing patients in both pediatric and adult age groups and in primary care only. Perceived deficiencies and preferences in rotation types and quantity were also analyzed. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Graduate Medical Education, Graduate Surveys
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Segal, Scott; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1990
A survey of 567 graduates of 3 medical schools (Pennsylvania State University, University of Connecticut, and University of Massachusetts) showed medical school research involvement to be strongly associated with postgraduate research involvement. In residency specialty training, fellowship training, academic appointments, career practice choices,…
Descriptors: Careers, Comparative Analysis, Graduate Surveys, Higher Education
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Stein, David H.; Salive, Marcel E. – Academic Medicine, 1996
A survey of 797 preventive medicine residency graduates found that improvements are needed in the curricula for health administration, environmental health, health education, and occupational medicine. Women found their training less adequate than men did in all areas except clinical preventive medicine. Graduates tended to practice ultimately in…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Educational Quality, Graduate Medical Education, Graduate Surveys
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Armstrong, Elizabeth G.; Doyle, Jennifer; Bennett, Nancy L. – Academic Medicine, 2003
Studied the long-term effects of a professional development program on physician educators. Responses of 63 participants in a program for physician educators suggest that the program changed behaviors in significant ways and these changes persisted over time. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Graduate Surveys, Medical Education, Physicians
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Moberg, Thomas F.; Whitcomb, Michael E. – Academic Medicine, 1999
Surveys of faculty and graduating students at 125 medical schools found that by 1998 the schools, collectively, had made little progress in accomplishing recommended educational technology goals; there was much more use of technology in basic science courses than in clinical clerkships. Great variability was found across schools in the uses of…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Allied Health Occupations Education, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Technology
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Fincher, Ruth-Marie E.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1992
This study identified factors in graduating medical students' choice of primary versus nonprimary care specialty. Subjects were 509 students at the Medical College of Georgia in 1988-90. Students could be classified by such factors as desire for longitudinal patient care opportunities, monetary rewards, perception of lifestyle, and perception of…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Classification, Compensation (Remuneration), Decision Making
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Mazor, Kathleen M.; Campbell, Eric G.; Field, Terry; Purwono, Urip; Peterson, Dawn; Lockwood, John H.; Weissman, Joel S.; Gurwitz, Jerry H. – Academic Medicine, 2002
Examined graduating medical students' perceptions of the adequacy of instruction in managed care. Found that a majority felt they had not received adequate instruction in managed care, with responses suggesting that students defined managed care in terms of managing costs. (EV)
Descriptors: Graduate Surveys, Health Maintenance Organizations, Higher Education, Medical Education
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McClellan, Deborah A.; Talalay, Paul – Academic Medicine, 1992
A review of the combined M.D.-Ph.D training program at Johns Hopkins Medical School (Maryland) found that, of 109 students who earned both degrees since 1980, 42 have completed all training and are now in career positions. Most (81 percent) are in full-time academic posts, with 14 percent in research institutes and the remaining 5 percent in…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Graduate Surveys, Higher Education, Medical Education
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Hojat, Mohammadreza; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1990
A survey of 364 men and 86 women medical school graduates found women less likely to be employed full-time or have outside professional activities, more likely to hold full-time academic appointments, to treat low-income patients, and to serve in inner cities. Women worked fewer hours, had fewer patients, but published scientific articles as…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Case Studies, Employment Patterns, Graduate Surveys
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Babbott, David; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1989
A study of 11,136 1987 medical school seniors' specialty choices, before entering medical school and in preparation for residency, found similar preferences at both points, regardless of racial-ethnic background. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Ethnic Groups, Graduate Surveys, Higher Education
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Jarecky, Roy K.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1991
A survey of 723 medical school graduates investigated motivations for early specialty selections and later changes and factors involved in current specialty choice. Perceived match of personality and specialty, technology and methodology characteristic of specialty, and time for family were critical. Greater awareness of career lifestyles is…
Descriptors: Career Change, Career Choice, Career Education, Graduate Surveys
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Frieden, Carl; Fox, Barbara J. – Academic Medicine, 1991
The survey of 148 graduates of the combined M.D./Ph.D. Medical Scientist Training Program at Washington University (Missouri) found that 95 percent chose to enter residency programs rather than postdoctoral fellowships and 89 percent of those who had completed all training planned to join academic institutions or the National Institutes of Health.…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Career Development, Doctoral Programs, Employment Potential
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Lutsky, Irving; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1991
The analysis of 183 responses to a survey of former anesthesiology residents of the Medical College of Wisconsin found that 29 had been self-administered problematic substance abusers during their residencies, 23 had been alcohol dependent, and 6 had been drug dependent. More than 85 percent of respondents considered the drug policy information…
Descriptors: Alcohol Abuse, Anesthesiology, Drug Abuse, Graduate Medical Students
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Peters, Antoinette S.; Greenberger-Rosovsky, Rachel; Crowder, Charlotte; Block, Susan D.; Moore, Gordon T. – Academic Medicine, 2000
This study followed up 50 Harvard Medical School (Massachusetts) students who participated in the New Pathway (NP) program, an innovative curriculum that stressed humanistic medicine, lifelong learning, and social learning. Forty percent of NP students and 18 percent of traditional students went on to practice primary care or psychiatry; more NP…
Descriptors: College Outcomes Assessment, Curriculum Evaluation, Educational Innovation, Family Practice (Medicine)
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Jennett, Penny A.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1990
Among findings of an examination of medical-career changes made by 603 Alberta medical school graduates were that more specialists (35 percent) than family physicians (18) made changes, that 42 percent made changes during the first year of residency, and that reasons cited included general dissatisfaction (47 percent) and lifestyle compatibility…
Descriptors: Career Change, Family Practice (Medicine), Graduate Medical Students, Graduate Surveys
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