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What Every Graduating Medical Student Should Know about Urology: The Stakeholder Viewpoint - Abstract Show Comments PDF Print E-mail
  
Monday, 14 April 2008

Surgical Service, Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System, Boston, Massachusetts; Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

What should every medical student know about urology upon graduating from medical school? To answer this question, we conducted a survey of key stakeholders in an effective medical student education in urology.

Directors of the generalist residencies in the United States (emergency medicine, family medicine, internal medicine, and pediatrics), directors of urology residencies, medical student educators in urology, and applicants to the 2006 urology residency match were invited to complete an online survey. Participants were asked to select the 5 most important topics to be included in a core urology curriculum for all medical students.

Among 1859 stakeholders surveyed, response rates by stakeholder cohort ranged from 67% to 26% (overall 44%). There was marked homogeneity among participant groups as to what respondents considered to be the most important topics for a core urology curriculum for medical students. Based on aggregate data, the 8 most commonly cited topics included urinary stone disease (75% of respondents), hematuria (65%), urinary tract infections in adults (53%), benign prostatic hyperplasia (52%), urinary incontinence (45%), prostate cancer (45%), screening with prostate-specific antigen (33%), and testis torsion (24%).

This survey has identified the most important urology topics about which medical students should learn before graduation. Work is currently under way under the aegis of the American Urological Association to develop materials to standardize student education in these core topics across the United States.

Written by
Kerfoot BP, Turek PJ.

Reference
Urology. 2008 Apr;71(4):549-53.

PubMed Abstract
PMID:18387383

UroToday.com Prostate Cancer Section

Reader Comments
Informed Patient
Written by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it on 2008-04-15 13:07:06
Graduates shuld know that PSA is poorly defined. When first isolated by a forensic pathologist, its reason for existance was said to be as an enzyme to release sperm from ejaculate. Later, it was found useful, but imperfect, for PCa screening. Most medical people do not know that PSA can be found in women. It relates to breast cancer and hypothetically could be as useful - and as imperfect - for breast cancer screening. What is the truth as to what PSA is?

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