Attitudes and experiences of residents in pursuit of postgraduate fellowships: A national survey of Canadian trainees
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.5489/cuaj.2136Mots-clés :
Post-graduate, Education, Fellowship trainingRésumé
Introduction: There have been significant pressures on urology training in North America over the last decade due to both the constantly evolving skill set required and the external demands around delivery of urological care, particularly in Canada. We explore the attitudes and experience of Canadian urology residents toward their postgraduate decisions on fellowship opportunities.
Methods: The study consisted of a self-report questionnaire of 4 separate cohorts of graduating urology residents from 2008 to 2011. The first cohort graduating in 2008 and 2009 were sent surveys through SurveyMonkey.com after graduation from residency; those graduating in 2010 and 2011 were prospectively invited as a convenience sample attending a Queen’s Urology Examination Skills Training Program review course just prior to graduation. The survey included both open- and closed-ended questions, employing a 5-point Likert scale, and explored the attitudes and experience of fellowship choices. Likert scores for each question were reported as means ± standard deviation (SD). Descriptive and correlative statistics were used to analyze the responses. In addition, an agreement score was created for those responding with “strongly agree” and “agree” on the Likert scale.
Results: A total of 104 surveys were administered, with 84 respondents (80.8% response rate). As a whole, 84.9% of respondents agreed that they pursued fellowships; oncology and minimally invasive urology were the most popular choices throughout the 4 years. Respondents stated that reasons for pursuing a fellowship included: interest in pursuing an academic career (mean 3.73± 1.1 (SD): agreement score 61.1%) as well as acquiring marketable skills to obtain an urology position (3.59 ± 1.3: 64.4%). Most agreed or strongly agreed (84.9%) that a reason for pursing a fellowship was an interest in focusing their practice to this sub-specialty area. In comparison, most graduates disagreed that a reason for pursuing a fellowship was that residency did not equip them with the necessary skills to practice urology (2.49 ± 1.2: 19%). Most (81.2%) of graduates agreed they knew enough about academic urology to know if it would be a suitable career choice for them versus 54.7% regarding community urology (p < 0.0001). Surprisingly, only 61.7% of residents agreed that they completed a community elective during training, and most felt they would have benefited from additional elective time in the community.
Conclusions: Urology residents graduating from Canadian programs pursue postgraduate training to enhance their surgical skill set and to achieve marketability, but also to facilitate a potential academic career. Responses from the trainees suggest that exposure to community practice appears suboptimal and may be an area of focus for programs to aid in career counselling and professional development.
Téléchargements
Téléchargements
Publié-e
Comment citer
Numéro
Rubrique
Licence
Les auteurs accordent les droits d’auteurs liés à l’article et son contenu à l’Association des urologues du Canada. Cette entente signifie que vous ne pouvez pas faire ce qui suit, sans d’abord obtenir l’autorisation écrite de l’AUC :
- Afficher l’article sur tout site Web.
- Traduire ou autoriser une tierce partie à traduire l’article.
- Copier ou reproduire l’article par quelque moyen que ce soit et sous tout format que ce soit, ou autoriser d’autres à le faire, au-delà de ce qui est permis par la loi canadienne du droit d’auteur.
- Copier ou reproduire des sections de l’article, y compris les tableaux et figures, par quelque moyen que ce soit, ou autoriser d’autres à le faire, au-delà de ce qui est permis par la loi canadienne du droit d’auteur.
L’AUC encourage l’usage des articles à des fins éducatives sans but commercial et ne refusera pas sans motif raisonnable toute demande d’autorisation à cet effet.
Vous conservez le droit moral lié à l’article et son contenu. Cela signifie que l’AUC ne peut utiliser ses droits d’auteurs d’une manière telle que cela pourrait avoir des répercussions négatives sur votre réputation ou sur votre droit à être associé à l’article.
L’AUC exige également que vous garantissiez ce qui suit :
- Vous êtes l’auteur ou les auteurs et seul(s) propriétaire(s) du contenu, le contenu de l’article est original et n’a jamais été publié et vous n’en avez pas déjà cédé les droits d’auteurs ni accordé de licence concernant son contenu à toute autre tierce partie;
- Toutes les personnes qui ont contribué de manière considérable à la rédaction de l’article sont mentionnées;
- L’article ne viole aucun droit de propriété de toute tierce partie, et vous avez obtenu les autorisations requises pour inclure les travaux d’autres personnes dans cet article; et
- L’article ne diffame aucune tierce partie ni ne viole les droits à la vie privée de toute tierce partie.
