Publication | Open Access
Are residents learners or workers? A historical perspective in Japan
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Citations
3
References
2020
Year
Japanese HistoryEast Asian StudiesEducationAllied Health ProfessionsWorkforce EducationJapan StudyLanguage StudiesJapanese StudiesGraduate Medical EducationHealth Services ResearchHealth EducationCareer EnhancementHealth PolicyPostgraduate Medical EducationAre Residents LearnersInformal LearningNursingHealth SystemsWorkforce DevelopmentInternational HealthContinuing Medical EducationJapanese BuddhismMedical Education LiteratureHealth Profession TrainingCultural AnthropologyEducational Program Development
Many countries enforce limits on the number of hours that medical residents work. For example, in the United States, regulations about duty hours were instituted by the Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education as early as in 2003, reinforcing those limits in 2011 and again in 2017 (Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, 2017). These reforms triggered discussion in medical education literature about their wide-ranging effects on resident education, resident wellness, and patient care (Bolster & Rourke, 2015). In Japan, restrictions on working hours will be implemented for physicians in April 2024 (Shibuya & Unno, 2019). Because of its rapidly shifting demographics to being a super-aged society with a low birth rate, Japan is now facing issues with residents’ learning and working that other countries will need to confront in the near future as their populations shift as well (as of late 2020). Here we report on the history and current situation of postgraduate medical education in Japan, which are highly relevant to re-evaluating postgraduate training in other countries.
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