1. Factors Associated With Family Medicine and Internal Medicine First-Year Residents’ Ambulatory Care Training Time
- Author
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Jung G. Kim, Hector P. Rodriguez, Stephen M. Shortell, Eric S. Holmboe, Bruce Fuller, and Diane R. Rittenhouse
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,020205 medical informatics ,education ,Training time ,Graduate medical education ,MEDLINE ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,Environment ,Medicare ,Accreditation ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ambulatory care ,Internal medicine ,Ambulatory Care ,Internal Medicine ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Receipt ,Medicaid ,Internship and Residency ,General Medicine ,United States ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Education, Medical, Graduate ,Family medicine ,Family Practice - Abstract
PURPOSE Despite the importance of training in ambulatory care settings for residents to acquire important competencies, little is known about the organizational and environmental factors influencing the relative amount of time primary care residents train in ambulatory care during residency. The authors examined factors associated with postgraduate year 1 (PGY-1) residents' ambulatory care training time in Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)-accredited primary care programs. METHOD U.S.-accredited family medicine (FM) and internal medicine (IM) programs' 2016-2017 National Graduate Medical Education (GME) Census data from 895 programs within 550 sponsoring institutions (representing 13,077 PGY-1s) were linked to the 2016 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Cost Reports and 2015-2016 Area Health Resource File. Multilevel regression models examined the association of GME program characteristics, sponsoring institution characteristics, geography, and environmental factors with PGY-1 residents' percentage of time spent in ambulatory care. RESULTS PGY-1 mean (standard deviation, SD) percent time spent in ambulatory care was 25.4% (SD, 0.4) for both FM and IM programs. In adjusted analyses (% increase [standard error, SE]), larger faculty size (0.03% [SE, 0.01], P < .001), sponsoring institution's receipt of Teaching Health Center (THC) funding (6.6% (SE, 2.7), P < .01), and accreditation warnings (4.8% [SE, 2.5], P < .05) were associated with a greater proportion of PGY-1 time spent in ambulatory care. Programs caring for higher proportions of Medicare beneficiaries spent relatively less time in ambulatory care (< 0.5% [SE, 0.2], P < .01). CONCLUSIONS Ambulatory care time for PGY-1s varies among ACGME-accredited primary care residency programs due to the complex context and factors primary care GME programs operate under. Larger ACGME-accredited FM and IM programs and those receiving federal THC GME funding had relatively more PGY-1 time spent in ambulatory care settings. These findings inform policies to increase resident exposure in ambulatory care, potentially improving learning, competency achievement, and primary care access.
- Published
- 2020
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