4.3 Article

Emerging workforce readiness in regenerative healthcare

Journal

REGENERATIVE MEDICINE
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages 197-206

Publisher

FUTURE MEDICINE LTD
DOI: 10.2217/rme-2020-0137

Keywords

clinical course development; education; medical curriculum; next generation; proficiency; readiness; regenerative medicine

Funding

  1. Mayo Clinic Center for Regenerative Medicine
  2. Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine, and Regenerative Medicine Minnesota

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The field of regenerative medicine has matured, but there is a lack of trained healthcare providers for the next generation. This report discusses the development of a regenerative medicine curriculum as a reference for scholars and institutions aiming to establish formalized regenerative medicine courses.
The biology of regenerative medicine has steadily matured, providing the foundation for randomized clinical trials and translation into validated applications. Today, the growing regenerative armamentarium is poised to impact disease management, yet a gap in training next-generation healthcare providers, equipped to adopt and deliver regenerative options, has been exposed. This special report highlights a multiyear experience in developing and deploying a comprehensive regenerative curriculum for medical trainees. For academicians and institutions invested in establishing a formalized regenerative medicine syllabus, the Regenerative Medicine and Surgery course provides a patient-focused prototype for next-generation learners, offering a dedicated educational experience that encompasses discovery, development and delivery of regenerative solutions. Built with the vision of an evolving regenerative care model, this transdisciplinary endeavor could serve as an adoptable education portal to advance the readiness of the emergent regenerative healthcare workforce globally.

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