Physician Education in Sleep and Sleep Disorders: A National Survey of U.S. Medical Schools
Author(s) -
Raymond C. Rosen,
Mark R. Rosekind,
Craig Rosevear,
Wesley E. Cole,
William C. Dement
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
sleep
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.222
H-Index - 207
eISSN - 1550-9109
pISSN - 0161-8105
DOI - 10.1093/sleep/16.3.249
Subject(s) - sleep medicine , accreditation , curriculum , sleep (system call) , medicine , medical education , family medicine , graduate medical education , sleep disorder , psychology , psychiatry , insomnia , pedagogy , computer science , operating system
A national survey was conducted of 126 accredited medical schools in the United States to evaluate physician education in sleep and sleep disorders and to identify potential obstacles to effective teaching in the area. Parallel survey instruments were designed to evaluate preclinical and clinical training in sleep. Instructors indicated the specific courses in which this material is taught, the format of teaching, methods of student evaluation, assigned readings and clinical experience and educational resources provided. A total of 545 responses were received, which represents an 82.6% overall response rate. Responses were obtained from all accredited medical schools, and the sample was about equally divided between preclinical and clinical course directors. Less than 2 hours of total teaching time is allocated to sleep and sleep disorders, on average, with 37 schools reporting no structured teaching time whatever in this area. Only 8% of medical students are trained in the use of sleep laboratory procedures, and 11% have participated in the clinical evaluation of sleep-disordered patients. Less than 5% of medical schools offer 4 or more hours of didactic teaching on sleep, most of which consists of 4th year elective experiences. More than two-thirds of the survey respondents stated that current education is inadequate and that additional time should be devoted to this area. The major obstacles reported are the unavailability of qualified faculty, lack of curriculum time and the need for additional clinical and educational resources. Overall, it appears that physician education in sleep and sleep disorders is largely inadequate, despite increasing evidence of the role of sleep in patient health and well-being.
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