• Can Fam Physician · Sep 2016

    Satisfaction with civilian family medicine residency training: Perspectives from serving general duty medical officers in the Canadian Armed Forces.

    • Brent Wolfrom, Geoff Hodgetts, Jyoti Kotecha, Emily Pollock, Mary Martin, Han Han, and Pierre Morissette.
    • Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont, and a family physician with the Queen's Family Health Team. brent.wolfrom@dfm.queensu.ca.
    • Can Fam Physician. 2016 Sep 1; 62 (9): e540-6.

    ObjectiveTo evaluate satisfaction with civilian residency training programs among serving general duty medical officers within the Canadian Armed Forces.DesignA 23-item, cross-sectional survey face-validated by the office of the Surgeon General of the Canadian Armed Forces.SettingCanada.ParticipantsGeneral duty medical officers serving in the Canadian Armed Forces as of February 2014 identified through the Directorate of Health Services Personnel of the Canadian Forces Health Services Group Headquarters.Main Outcome MeasuresSatisfaction with and time spent in 7 domains of training: trauma, critical care, emergency medicine, psychiatry, occupational health, sports medicine, and base clinic training. Overall preparedness for leading a health care team, caring for a military population, working in isolated and challenging environments, and being deployed were evaluated on a 5-point Likert scale.ResultsAmong the survey respondents (n = 135, response rate 54%), 77% agreed or strongly agreed that their family medicine residency training was relevant to their role as a general duty medical officer. Most respondents were either satisfied or very satisfied with their emergency medicine training (77%) and psychiatry training (63%), while fewer were satisfied or very satisfied with their sports medicine (47%), base clinic (41%), and critical care (43%) training. Even fewer respondents were satisfied or very satisfied with their trauma (26%) and occupational health (12%) training. Regarding overall preparedness, 57% believed that they were adequately prepared to care for a military patient population, and 52% of respondents believed they were prepared for their first posting. Fewer respondents (38%) believed they were prepared to work in isolated, austere, or challenging environments, and even fewer (32%) believed that residency training prepared them to lead a health care team.ConclusionGeneral duty medical officers were satisfied with many aspects of their family medicine residency training; however, military-specific areas for improvement were identified. Many of these areas might be addressed within the context of a 2-year residency program without risking the generalist nature of family medicine training. These findings provide valuable data for residency programs that accept military trainees across the country.Copyright© the College of Family Physicians of Canada.

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