| BGS
Newsletter Online |
| Undergraduate
Geriatric Medicine Education - results of survey |
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The findings of a survey of undergraduate geriatric medicine education were presented in poster form at the BGS Autumn meeting in Harrogate. A preliminary report has already been circulated to the members of the BGS Education and Training Committee and the full report is now available on the BGS website at www.bgs.org.uk/publications Key
Results The importance of academic geriatricians in organising and developing teaching was emphasised. Although the main input from academics seemed to be in the planning and co-ordination of the curriculum, there was still involvement in teaching. Just over half of responding medical schools had an academic department of geriatric medicine. There was
majority support that geriatric medicine should be taught separately,
although in practice it tended to be taught with another subject, for
example general medicine or psychiatry. Views on when during the course
geriatric medicine should be taught were disparate and this was reflected
in the medical schools' replies. A range of methods and locations for
teaching were supported. Although the multi-disciplinary nature of geriatric
medicine was recognised by support for other disciplines to be involved
in student teaching, this view was perhaps surprisingly not universally
held. Comments by the heads of medical schools indicated support for the development of new approaches to the teaching of geriatric medicine, including special study modules (student selected components), inter-professional education and integration of geriatric medicine with other subjects. Recommendations The Society could allow a greater proportion of the biannual meetings to be devoted to undergraduate teaching and if there is sufficient interest, establish a Teacher's Section or Special Interest Group. This could enable both networking and the presentation of short papers which do not have to conform to the established standards of the Society's free communications for research. The Education and Training Committee welcome comments on the report. Lisa
Bartram |