The responsibilities and activities of internal medicine clerkship directors. |
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Authors: | P A Hemmer D M Elnicki T A Albritton R Kovach M M Udden R Y Wong M J Battistone K Szauter |
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Affiliation: | Medicine, The Uniformed Services University, Bethesda, MD, USA. phemmer@usuhs.mil |
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Abstract: | PURPOSE: To characterize the responsibilities, activities, and scholarly productivity of internal medicine clerkship directors (CDs). METHODS: In 1999, internal medicine CDs from 122 U.S. medical schools and one Canadian medical school were surveyed. The instrument asked about the CDs' demo-graphics, workloads, clerkship characteristics, and scholarly productivity. RESULTS: The response rate was 89%; 72% of the respondents were men. Mean age was 45 years, mean time as CD was 6.5 years, and 58% of the CDs had completed fellowship training. The CDs spent 28% of their professional time on the clerkship, three half days weekly in clinic, and three months on inpatient services. The CDs had published a mean of 2.2 (range 0-20) articles and received a mean of 0.7 (range 0-4) grants. Similar factors were associated with publishing articles and receiving grants; gender (men), < or = three clinic half days weekly, fellowship training, having a faculty development program, teaching other courses, and discussing expectations with their department chairs. In a multivariate analysis, fellowship training, clinic half days, teaching other courses, and discussing expectations explained 22% of the variance for papers published. For grants received, a model with gender, clinic half days, a faculty development program, discussing expectations, and teaching other courses explained 35% of the variance. CONCLUSIONS: An internal medicine CD invests significant effort administering the clerkship and contributing to clinical and educational activities. The factors associated with successful scholarship may be useful for fostering CDs' academic careers. |
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