4.6 Article

Measuring Graduate Medical Education Outcomes to Honor the Social Contract

Journal

ACADEMIC MEDICINE
Volume 97, Issue 5, Pages 643-648

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000004592

Keywords

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Funding

  1. American Board of Surgery
  2. American Board of Family Medicine Foundation
  3. Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation

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The GME system heavily relies on public funding to produce physicians that meet society's needs, but there is a lack of public accountability in how this funding is used. However, assessing GME outcomes and guiding training improvement can lead to a better alignment with public needs.
The graduate medical education (GME) system is heavily subsidized by the public in return for producing physicians who meet society's needs. Under the terms of this implicit social contract, decisions about how this funding is allocated are deferred to the individual training sites. Institutions receiving public funding face potential conflicts of interest, which have at times prioritized institutional purposes and needs over societal needs, highlighting that there is little public accountability for how such funding is used. The cost and institutional burden of assessing many fundamental GME outcomes, such as specialty, geographic physician distribution, training-imprinted cost behaviors, and populations served, could be mitigated as data sources and methods for assessing GME outcomes and guiding training improvement already exist. This new capacity to assess system-level outcomes could help institutions and policymakers strategically address the greatest public needs. Measurement of educational outcomes can also be used to guide training improvement at every level of the educational system (i.e., the individual trainee, individual teaching institution, and collective GME system levels). There are good examples of institutions, states, and training consortia that are already assessing and using GME outcomes in these ways. The ultimate outcome could be a GME system that better meets the needs of society and better honors what is now only an implicit social contract.

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