The current status of sports medicine training in United States internal medicine residency programmes
- Resource Type
- Authors
- Dilip R. Patel; Mario A. Davidson; D Cucos; Thomas Melgar; C L Sweeney
- Source
- Scopus-Elsevier
- Subject
- Physical Therapy Specialty
medicine.medical_specialty
Sports medicine
Cross-sectional study
education
Graduate medical education
Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation
General status
Sports Medicine
Surveys and Questionnaires
Internal medicine
Medicine
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Curriculum
health care economics and organizations
Accreditation
Medical education
business.industry
Internship and Residency
General Medicine
Quarter (United States coin)
United States
Test (assessment)
Cross-Sectional Studies
Family medicine
Original Article
Clinical Competence
business
human activities
- Language
To determine the general status of sports medicine training in internal medicine residency programmes in the United States.A cross sectional survey of the programme directors and chief residents of each of the 407 accredited internal medicine programmes listed in the 1999-2000 Graduate Medical Education Directory.The questionnaire was returned by 231 of 404 (57%) programme directors and 233 of 404 (58%) chief residents. A chief and director of the same programme (paired responses) replied from 144 of 404 (36%) programmes surveyed. A formal sports medicine curriculum was reported by 22.1% of programme directors. Programmes with a formal curriculum were 2.9 times more likely to offer any of the sports medicine educational experiences (p0.0001; Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel). Programmes with block rotations were more likely to include all of the educational experiences surveyed than those without (p0.002 for each; chi(2) test). A total of 162 programmes included sports medicine as part of other rotations. Most programmes only included sports medicine as part of other rotations: 44.6% (103/231) of all programmes and 63.6% (103/162) of programmes with sports medicine as part of other rotations. Some 29.9% (69/231) of directors reported having an elective, and 3.9% (9/231) reported a required rotation. Almost a quarter (21.7%; 50/231) of directors reported that their residents received no clinical experience in sports medicine.Little attention is given to the subject of sports medicine when internal medicine residency curricula are developed in the United States. Thus only a small percentage of American internal medicine residency programmes provide significant training in sports medicine.