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Lazarow, Sherine – ProQuest LLC, 2018
In today's healthcare field, recent changes in professional standards, specifically board certification, are affecting physicians who have been practicing medicine for years. While historically board certification was voluntary, in recent years there has been a push to make it mandatory to retain hospital and insurance privileges. In an attempt to…
Descriptors: Physicians, Certification, Mandatory Continuing Education, Well Being
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Goldfarb, Elizabeth; Baer, Lee; Fromson, John A.; Gorrindo, Tristan; Iodice, Kristin E.; Birnbaum, Robert J. – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2012
Introduction: The controversy surrounding commercial support for continuing medical education (CME) programs has led to policy changes, but data show no significant difference in perceived bias between commercial and noncommercial CME. Indeed, what attendees perceive as commercial influence is not fully understood. We sought to clarify what…
Descriptors: Professional Continuing Education, Medical Education, Lecture Method, Course Content
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Olson, Curtis A.; Balmer, Jann T.; Mejicano, George C. – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2011
Continuing medical education's transition from an emphasis on dissemination to changing clinical practice has made it increasingly necessary for CME providers to develop effective interorganizational collaborations. Although interorganizational collaboration has become commonplace in most sectors of government, business, and academia, our review…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Health Personnel, Continuing Education, Institutional Cooperation
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Mullikin, Elizabeth A.; Ales, Mary W.; Cho, Jane; Nelson, Teena M.; Rodrigues, Shelly B.; Speight, Mike – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2011
Introduction: Performance Improvement Continuing Medical Education (PI CME) provides an important opportunity for CME providers to combine educational and quality health care improvement methodologies. Very few CME providers take on the challenges of planning this type of intervention because it is still a new practice and there are limited…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Smoking, Models, Health Services
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Chen, Walter; Lai, Ming-May; Li, Tsai-Chung; Chen, Paul J.; Chan, Cho-Yu; Lin, Cheng-Chieh – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2011
Introduction: The mini-clinical evaluation exercise (mini-CEX) is widely used for the evaluation of medical trainees' clinical competence. To our knowledge, no study has examined the effect of mini-CEX on the preceptors. Based on the principle of "to teach is to learn twice," we hypothesized that the act of precepting a mini-CEX would enhance…
Descriptors: Hospitals, Clinical Experience, Professional Development, Evaluation
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Young, Kevin J.; Kim, Julie J.; Yeung, George; Sit, Christina; Tobe, Sheldon W. – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2011
Introduction: The need for up-to-date and high-quality continuing medical education (CME) is growing while the financial investment in CME is shrinking. Despite online technology's potential to efficiently deliver electronic CME (eCME) to large numbers of users, it has not yet displaced traditional CME. The purpose of this study was to explore…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Physicians, Focus Groups, Credibility
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Cash, Brooks; Mitchner, Natasha A.; Ravyn, Dana – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2011
Introduction: Performance of health care professionals depends on both medical knowledge and the certainty with which they possess it. Conventional continuing medical education interventions assess the correctness of learners' responses but do not determine the degree of confidence with which they hold incorrect information. This study describes…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Professional Continuing Education, Physicians, Mandatory Continuing Education
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Ales, Mary W.; Rodrigues, Shelly B.; Snyder, Robyn; Conklin, Mary – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2011
Organizations from varied sectors have pursued collaboration to better fulfill their missions, facilitate decision making, solve more complex problems, and respond more rapidly to a changing environment. While these benefits are evident through the products and services provided, few organizations evaluate the factors that contribute to the…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Health Needs, Allied Health Occupations Education, Conflict of Interest
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Olson, Curtis A.; Shershneva, Marianna B.; Brownstein, Michelle Horowitz – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2011
Introduction: No educational method or combination of methods will facilitate implementation of clinical practice guidelines in all clinical contexts. To develop an empirical basis for aligning methods to contexts, we need to move beyond "Does it work?" to also ask "What works for whom and under what conditions?" This study employed Success Case…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Guidelines, Case Method (Teaching Technique), Intervention
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McKeithen, Tom; Robertson, Sheila; Speight, Mike – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2011
An outcomes-based education (OBE) approach was desired for the CS2day initiative, and the size and scope of the initiative compelled a consistent and cohesive framework in order to apply such an approach. A series of competency statements were developed to provide that framework. The competency statements were based on current clinical guidelines,…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Outcome Based Education, Summative Evaluation, Competency Based Education
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Shershneva, Marianna B.; Larrison, Christopher; Robertson, Sheila; Speight, Mike – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2011
Introduction: Although evaluating at multiple outcome levels has been proposed for continuing education activities and programs, it is a complex undertaking and is not done routinely, especially in collaborative, multicomponent programs. This article reports on strategies used and results obtained in an evaluation project that examined multiple…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Smoking, Continuing Education, Patients
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Jubien, Peggy – Canadian Journal of University Continuing Education, 2008
This article provides an overview of problem-based learning (PBL) in Canadian undergraduate medical education and continuing medical education (CME) programs. The CME field in Canada is described, and the major professional associations that require physicians to take annual courses and programs are noted. A brief history of PBL in undergraduate…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Physicians, Problem Based Learning, Professional Associations
Abrahamson, Stephen; Lloyd, John S. – MOBIUS, 1984
Includes an historical review of continuing medical education (CME) in the United States from 1909, when the Blackburn Plan began, to the post-World War II era, with the growth of instructional technology. Two earlier studies that reviewed evaluation research in CME are discussed. Lloyd's brief response disputes some of Abrahamson's points. (SK)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Mandatory Continuing Education, Medical Education, Physicians
Stross, Jeoffrey K.; Harland, William R. – MOBIUS, 1987
A survey of 1,102 Michigan physicians and a second survey of 532 physicians attending continuing medical education classes covered the topic of whether or not continuing medical education should be made mandatory. The results do not support a return to mandatory continuing medical education. (Author/CH)
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Mandatory Continuing Education, Medical Education, Physicians
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Fore, Robert C.; And Others – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 1993
Physicians and other health professionals attended either a two-day voluntary (n=27) or one-day mandatory (n=23) conference on toxicology. Groups did not differ in pretest/posttest scores; two-day participants were significantly more satisfied. Both groups demonstrated significant knowledge gains. (SK)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Mandatory Continuing Education, Medical Education, Participant Satisfaction
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