American foreign medical graduates. Performance after a year of supervised clinical clerkships (fifth pathway)
F. Rosner and J. E. Mulvihill
The performance during graduate medical education of Americans who have
studied medicine abroad and who have taken a year of intense and closely
supervised clinical clerkships (fifth pathway program) was assessed. Only
14% of such house officers were given inadequate or below-average ratings
in overall clinical performance by residency program directors. Ninety
percent or more received average, good, very good, or excellent evaluations
in their ability to take medical histories and perform physical
examinations, in their response to instruction, in behavior and
interpersonal relationships, and in appearance and emotional stability.
Seventy percent were said to be as good as or better than house staff in
general. Carefully selected and properly motivated Americans who have
studied medicine in a foreign country can become good physicians following
a well-organized, comprehensive closely supervised year of clinical
clerkship education.