Korean Med Educ Rev.  2018 Feb;20(1):6-14. 10.17496/kmer.2018.20.1.6.

Development and Operation of Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship Programs in Overseas Medical Schools

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Medical Education, Kyungpook National University School of Medicine, Daegu, Korea. shyeo@knu.ac.kr

Abstract

In recent years, Korean medical schools have shown a growing interest in the longitudinal integrated clerkship (LIC) as a means of improving clinical education. Some overseas medical schools have tried the LIC since the 1970s. In the 1990s, several universities in the United States, Canada, and Australia introduced LICs. A variety of studies have confirmed positive results of the LIC. Traditional block-rotation is a discipline-based, inpatient-centered practice. Instead, under the LIC system, a medical student responsible for a panel of longitudinal patients observes developments of their diseases, serving several departments simultaneously. Overseas medical schools have different LIC models depending on their affiliate hospitals' sizes and characteristics. The purpose of this study is to introduce LIC practices in Harvard Medical School and University of California San Francisco, which could be applied by Korean medical schools. This paper also aims to find out the strategies that have been able to help the two US medical schools implement the LIC successfully.

Keyword

Clinical education; Longitudinal integrated clerkship; Medical schools

MeSH Terms

Australia
California
Canada
Education
Humans
Schools, Medical*
Students, Medical
United States
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