Sleep medicine exposure offered by United States residency training programs

被引:11
作者
Sullivan, Shannon S. [1 ]
Cao, Michelle T. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Dept Pediat, Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA
[2] Stanford Univ, Dept Neurol, Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA
[3] Stanford Univ, Dept Psychiat, Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL SLEEP MEDICINE | 2021年 / 17卷 / 04期
关键词
sleep medicine training; education; ACGME training; workforce pipeline; PHYSICIAN EDUCATION; CURRICULUM; PULMONARY; GO;
D O I
10.5664/jcsm.9062
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Study Objectives: To understand the sleep medicine educational exposure among parent specialties of sleep medicine fellowships, we conducted an online survey among Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education-approved training programs. Methods: Target respondents were program directors of family medicine, otolaryngology, psychiatry, neurology, pediatrics, and pulmonary and critical care training programs in the United States. The survey was based on the Sleep Education Survey, a peer-reviewed, published survey created by the American Academy of Neurology Sleep Section. The modified 18-question survey was emailed via Survey Monkey per published methods totaling 3 requests approximately 1 week apart in January 2017. Results: A total of 1228 programs were contacted, and 479 responses were received for an overall response rate of 39%. Some programs in every specialty group offered a sleep medicine elective or a required rotation to trainees. Pulmonary and critical care and neurology reported the highest percentages of sleep medicine rotation as an option for housestaff (85.7% and 90.8%, respectively), and pulmonary and critical care had the highest portion of programs indicating a rotation requirement (75.4%). Teaching format was a mixture of didactic lectures, sleep center/laboratory exposure, and case reports, with lectures being the most common format. Didactics averaged 4.75 h/y. Few programs reported trainees subsequently pursuing sleep medicine fellowship (<10% produced a fellow over 5 years), and even fewer reported having a trainee who pursued grant funding for sleep-related research over 5 years. Conclusions: There is wide variability and overall low exposure to sleep medicine education among United States "parent" Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education training programs whose medical boards offer sleep medicine certification.
引用
收藏
页码:825 / 832
页数:8
相关论文
共 20 条
[1]   The Current State of Sleep Medicine Education in US Neurology Residency Training Programs: Where Do We Go from Here? [J].
Avidan, Alon Y. ;
Vaughn, Bradley V. ;
Silber, Michael H. .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL SLEEP MEDICINE, 2013, 9 (03) :281-286
[2]   Estimation of the global prevalence and burden of obstructive sleep apnoea: a literature-based analysis [J].
Benjafield, Adam V. ;
Ayas, Najib T. ;
Eastwood, Peter R. ;
Heinzer, Raphael ;
Ip, Mary S. M. ;
Morrell, Mary J. ;
Nunez, Carlos M. ;
Patel, Sanjay R. ;
Penzel, Thomas ;
Pepin, Jean-Louis D. ;
Peppard, Paul E. ;
Sinha, Sanjeev ;
Tufik, Sergio ;
Valentine, Kate ;
Malhotra, Atul .
LANCET RESPIRATORY MEDICINE, 2019, 7 (08) :687-698
[3]   Otolaryngology sleep medicine curriculum objectives as determined by sleep experts [J].
Cass, Nathan ;
Kominsky, Alan ;
Cabrera-Muffly, Cristina .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OTOLARYNGOLOGY, 2017, 38 (02) :139-142
[4]   Organization and Structure for Sleep Medicine Programs at Academic Institutions: Part 2-Goals and Strategies to Optimize Patient Care, Education, and Discovery [J].
Chesson, Andrew L., Jr. ;
Chervin, Ronald D. ;
Benca, Ruth M. ;
Greenough, Glen P. ;
O'Hearn, Daniel J. ;
Auckley, Dennis H. ;
Littner, Michael ;
Mullington, Janet M. ;
Malhotra, Atul ;
Berry, Richard B. ;
Malhotra, Raman K. ;
Schulman, David A. .
SLEEP, 2013, 36 (06) :803-811
[5]   The State of Academic Sleep Surgery: A Survey of United States Residency and Fellowship Programs [J].
Gouveia, Christopher J. ;
Kern, Robert C. ;
Liu, Stanley Yung-Chuan ;
Capasso, Robson .
LARYNGOSCOPE, 2017, 127 (10) :2423-2428
[6]  
Khawaja IS, 2017, Prim Care Companion CNS Disord, V19
[7]   Clarifying Requisite Sleep Medicine Content for the Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Fellow A Key Step Forward, but Where Do We Go From Here? [J].
Mehra, Reena ;
Rosen, Ilene M. .
CHEST, 2019, 155 (03) :460-462
[8]   Sleep education in pediatric residency programs: A cross-cultural look [J].
Mindell J.A. ;
Bartle A. ;
Ahn Y. ;
Ramamurthy M.B. ;
Huong H.T.D. ;
Kohyama J. ;
Li A.M. ;
Ruangdaraganon N. ;
Sekartini R. ;
Teng A. ;
Goh D.Y. .
BMC Research Notes, 6 (1)
[9]   Sleep education in medical school curriculum: A glimpse across countries [J].
Mindell, Jodi A. ;
Bartle, Alex ;
Abd Wahab, Norrashidah ;
Ahn, Youngmin ;
Ramamurthy, Mahesh Babu ;
Huynh Thi Duy Huong ;
Kohyama, Jun ;
Ruangdaraganon, Nichara ;
Sekartini, Rini ;
Teng, Arthur ;
Goh, Daniel Y. T. .
SLEEP MEDICINE, 2011, 12 (09) :928-931
[10]  
National Institutes of Health, SLEEP DIS RES PLAN