Innovations in Ambulatory-Care Education
- 2 January 1986
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 314 (1) , 52-53
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm198601023140110
Abstract
There is a widening consensus that ambulatory care must play a far greater part in undergraduate and postgraduate medical education. The GPEP Report noted that "Although fewer than five percent of all physician/patient contacts result in hospitalization clinical clerkships are predominantly based on hospital inpatient services."1 The report indicated the need for outpatient and community educational settings.In this issue of the Journal, Rieselbach and Jackson2 and Perkoff3 cogently summarize the factors that increasingly limit the role of inpatient care as a means for satisfactory medical education. Expanding techniques for diagnosis and therapy in the ambulatory setting result in . . .Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- In Support of a Linkage between the Funding of Graduate Medical Education and Care of the IndigentNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Teaching Clinical Medicine in the Ambulatory SettingNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- General Medical Care and the Education of Internists in University HospitalsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1985