18
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Residency training in India: Time for a course correction

      editorial
      Indian Journal of Ophthalmology
      Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisherPMC
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          A number of communications in the recent months have brought into sharp focus the many deficiencies that afflict the Ophthalmology residency training in India.[1 2] The difficulties and the limitations pertain to ophthalmic and teaching infrastructure, human resources, and the teaching programs. Wide variability in the quality of academic programs was a glaring problem. A study of medical colleges by the Academic and Research Committee of the All India Ophthalmological Society (AIOS) in 2000 provided evidence of huge gaps in ophthalmic infrastructure and the lack of subspecialty services.[3] Another survey of the medical colleges in India in 2005 pointed to the deficiencies in academics and research. It showed that 20% of the institutions had no ophthalmic journals, 60% had two or less international journals, and only 8.6% had > 5 international publications in the last 3 years.[4] A study from the state of Andhra Pradesh revealed that there was no significant change in the residency training in eight medical colleges in two evaluations 8 years apart (1998 and 2006) after provision of modern instrumentation and training. The intervention did not make a difference to the quality of postgraduate training or help to make the residents confident of setting up their practice.[5] The studies which sought the perception and experience of residents and young ophthalmologists corroborate these observations. A survey from Maharashtra (2008) pointed to dissatisfaction of residents with their residency programs. There was poor emphasis on surgeries other than cataract.[6] In another recent survey, the final-year residents from South India (2014) expressed the need for improved training across all aspects of ophthalmology. There was a big difference between the numbers of surgeries they performed and the numbers they felt would have been ideal.[7] Another study from the same region showed that nearly half of the final-year residents had not experienced wet lab/simulation lab training. More than 50% of the residents had not performed any extracapsular cataract extraction, phacoemulsification, squint, trabeculectomy and dacryocystorhinostomy or any other oculoplastic surgery. Forty percent of the residents expressed their lack of satisfaction with their surgical training.[8] A study of young ophthalmologists completing their residency from 2014 to 2016 by the AIOS revealed that nearly a quarter (24.5%) felt that their teaching program was not adequate. It also showed a wide variation in the support for academics and research in the medical colleges.[9] Has the residency training shown a measurable progress in the recent years? Six years ago the AIOS introduced postgraduate teaching programmes in all five zones of the country during my tenure as president, which have been running successfully. Many other PG teaching programmes have also been initiated in this period. Have the programmes shown any impact? The communication by Biswas et al.[10] in this issue is an attempt to look at the changes over the years. This article[10] brings out persistent shortcomings in the present state of residency training even though there has been some improvement. The 21st-century-trained ophthalmologists perceived training such as refraction, orthoptic evaluation, pediatric visual acuity testing, fluorescein angiography, optical coherence tomography, and use of retinal LASERs to be inadequate (median perception rating ≤ 5). Fifty percent had performed 1 or less phacoemulsification, no trabeculectomy, no strabismus surgery and 2 or less eyelid surgeries. The continuing wide variability in standards of residency training across the country points to the need for a major rethinking and a course correction. A basic need for the course correction would be the creation of a fresh curriculum for residency as stressed by Gupta and Honavar in their recent editorials in the journal.[1 2] The other important element would be ensuring a strong enforcement of the curriculum which would require a more robust system for accreditation of residency programs and a uniform nationwide exit examination. This issue carries salient features of a proposed National Curriculum of Ophthalmology, which is based on a workshop by the AIOS in 2011 that adapted the International Council of Ophthalmology residency curriculum in the context of the needs of the country.[11 12] The curriculum is based on the premise that a well-structured curriculum should lay down all the ingredients including the minimum requirements of infrastructure, medical as well as teaching, tools and resources of education, human resources (numbers, qualifications, experience), and the course content. The curriculum includes research methodology and community ophthalmology. It incorporates the aspects of communication skills, professionalism, ethics and management which includes financial as well as practice and hospital management. The course content outlines the cognitive and technical skills that are necessary for a modern comprehensive ophthalmologist. It lays down the minimum acceptable diagnostic and therapeutic (including surgical) procedures that a resident should perform in his/her period of training. It outlines a well-defined mechanism for formative and summative assessment. It incorporates rubrics for evaluation of surgical skills and clinical examination, assessment of the affective domain, internal assessment which includes maintenance of log books and the outlines for an exit examination. The National Curriculum of Ophthalmology by AIOS formed an important input for the recommendations made by the curriculum committees of the National Board of Examination and Medical Council of India (MCI) (The author was a member of both committees). Laying down a curriculum however can only be a step for moving in the right direction. The real test lies in how well it is implemented. There are huge obstacles to implementation of a residency curriculum in the country in the current scenario. These include deficiencies in infrastructure (medical/ophthalmic equipment and teaching), human resources (numbers, training, and motivation) as well as the structure and mechanism for enforcing the curriculum. A new National Medical Commission Act which proposes replacement of the MCI and constitution of a new postgraduate medical board is in the offing. Does this portend a better future for residency training? This is still an unanswered question and only the future holds the Key ! About the author Dr. A.K. Grover is the recipient of Padmashri Award by the President of India for his services to Ophthalmology. He is the Chairman, Department of Ophthalmology at Sir Ganga Ram Hospital and Vision Eye Centres, New Delhi, India. Dr. Grover is Chairman of Subspecialty Education Committee, International Council of Ophthalmology, Councilor at large of the Asia Pacific Academy of Ophthalmology and Vice President of the Ocular Trauma Society of India. He is a past President of the Asia Pacific Society of Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Oculoplastics Association of India and the All India Ophthalmological Society (AIOS). He is an impeccable clinician, a gifted surgeon, an academician of repute, a dedicated teacher and a visionary leader. Indian Journal of Ophthalmology is proud to have him on the Editorial Board and represent the speciality of Ophthalmic Plastic Surgery. Ophthalmic education has been a passion for Dr. Grover. As chairman, Academic and Research Committee and as president of the AIOS, he took several initiatives including a nationwide survey on residency training, development of residency and subspecialty curricula and annual post graduate teaching programmes in each zone of the country.

          Related collections

          Most cited references11

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: found
          Is Open Access

          An evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in India and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training

          Aim: To evaluate teaching and practice in medical college ophthalmology departments in a representative Indian state and changes following provision of modern instrumentation and training. Study Type: Prospective qualitative study. Materials and Methods: Teaching and practice in all medical colleges in the state assessed on two separate occasions by external evaluators. Preferred criteria for training and care were pre-specified. Methodology included site visits to document functioning and conduct interviews. Assessments included resident teaching, use of instrumentation provided specifically for training and standard of eye care. The first evaluation (1998) was followed by provision of modern instrumentation and training on two separate occasions, estimated at Rupees 34 crores. The follow-up evaluation in 2006 used the same methodology as the first. Results: Eight departments were evaluated on the first occasion; there were 11 at the second. On the first assessment, none of the programs met the criteria for training or care. Following the provision of modern instrumentation and training, intraocular lens usage increased dramatically; but the overall situation remained essentially unchanged in the 8 departments evaluated 8 years later. Routine comprehensive eye examination was neither taught nor practiced. Individually supervised surgical training using beam splitters was not practiced in any program; neither was modern management of complications or its teaching. Phacoemulsification was not taught, and residents were not confident of setting up practice. Instruments provided specifically for training were not used for that purpose. Students reported that theoretical teaching was good. Conclusions: Drastic changes in training, patient care and accountability are needed in most medical college ophthalmology departments.
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: found
            Is Open Access

            Which is the best method to learn ophthalmology? Resident doctors′ perspective of ophthalmology training

            The study aimed to gauge ophthalmology resident doctors′ perception of their teaching programs and various methods used in it and to formulate a well structured program for teaching ophthalmology. Closed ended and open-ended questionnaires were used for survey of ophthalmology residents in West Maharashtra, India. Sixty-seven out of 69 residents of seven residency programs completed the questionnaire. On a scale of 0 (most unsatisfactory) to 4 (best), lectures with power point presentation had a median score of 4, didactic lectures 2, seminar 3, case presentation 4, wet lab 3 and journal club 3. There was a discrepancy in the actual number of surgeries performed by the resident doctors and their perception of the number needed to master those surgeries. Phacoemulsification and non-cataract surgery training was neglected in most programs. The residents wanted to be evaluated regularly and taught basic ophthalmic examination, use of equipments and procedures in greater depth.
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: found
              Is Open Access

              Postgraduate ophthalmic education in India: Are we on the right track?

              AK Grover (2008)
              The preamble of the curriculum for education of an ophthalmic specialist by the International Council of Ophthalmology identifies its objectives as ″designed to provide a structured program of learning that facilitates the acquisition of knowledge, understanding, skills and attitudes to a level appropriate for ophthalmic specialists who have been fully prepared to begin their career as independent consultants in ophthalmology. ″1 Are these objectives being met? In a 2007 survey of 269 US ophthalmologists who have been in practice for ≤ five years, 86% said they were extremely or very well prepared to practise comprehensive ophthalmology after residency training. 2 What about India? I do not know of any such survey carried out in India. However, from my interaction with postgraduates all over the country and experience as an examiner for Master of Science (MS), Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons (FRCS) and the Diplomate of the National Board of Examination (DNB), I suspect the figure would not exceed 20%. It is not that we lack excellent training programs. Some of our tertiary ophthalmic institutions have developed and adopted a good training module. However, these models have not been replicated elsewhere in the country due to the absence of a credible monitoring mechanism and a uniform exit examination. As a result, the standards of education in India vary from sublime to ridiculous. This fact has been known to us for a long time. The article by Thomas et al. 3 in this issue of the Indian Journal of Ophthalmology (IJO) brings this out in the most forceful way and also looks at the possible correctives. Today, we need to identify what ails the residency programs in the country and develop the will to fight the obstacles that hinder their development to the fullest potential. Let us first look at the available facts about the state of ophthalmic postgraduate education in India. The Academic and Research Committee (ARC) of the All India Ophthalmological Society (AIOS) carried out a survey in 2000 (presented during the AIOS annual conference in 2001) while I was the chairman. A questionnaire was sent to the heads of the departments of ophthalmology of all medical colleges in the country and followed up with two reminders. A response was obtained from 61 medical colleges (government 44, private 15, autonomous two), out of which 59 provided complete information, which could be analyzed. The mean intake of postgraduates in the colleges was 3.0 per year (range 0 to 17) for Doctor of Medicine (MD) or MS degree courses and 2.7 per year (range 0 to 15) for the diploma courses. The departments had a mean bed strength of 55.9 (range 10 to 250) The survey brought out some glaring deficiencies in manpower, infrastructure, clinical training, surgical training and academic programs. The mean strength of the faculty was 4.8 (range 2 to 23) and of senior residents was 2.3 (range 1 to 12), which was considered grossly inadequate due to the wide range of activities assigned to them. Many of them were unable to devote adequate time to work in the department due to involvement in eye camps (17 on an average/year) or in private practice. Posting of trained ophthalmic manpower for nonophthalmic duties was often a major constraint. The infrastructure was deficient with poor availability of ophthalmic equipment and teaching facilities. The deficiencies in ophthalmic equipment pertained to diagnostic (absence of applanation tonometer 17/59, noncontact tonometer 52/59, autorefractometer 33/59, A-scan biometer 5/59, B-Scan ultrasonography 42/59, pachymeter 43/59, automated perimeter 41/59), therapeutic (absence of argon laser or equivalent 41/59 and YAG laser 28/59) and surgical equipment (absence of phacoemulsification machine 43/59, vitrectomy machine 11/59 and endolaser 50/59). Even where equipment was available, constraints on its use by residents and junior faculty was often a hindrance to the process of learning. There was a shortage of teaching facilities with insufficient teaching halls, library facilities, audiovisual equipment, computers and internet facility in most medical colleges. There was a deficiency of subspecialty and supportive services in the colleges. There was no retina service (28/59), cornea service (25/59), pediatric ophthalmology service (46/59), oculoplastics service (46/59), neuro-ophthalmology service (48/59), ophthalmic pathology and microbiology (52/59), low vision aid service (54/59) and rehabilitation and epidemiology service (55/59). Clinical, surgical training and academic programs were thus hampered by the shortage of equipment, poor development of subspecialty services and lack of time with the faculty for various reasons listed above even though enough lectures, seminars and journal clubs were often being held in most colleges. The observations were corroborated by Murthy et al. 4 They carried out a survey between April 2002 and March 2003 and received a response from 105 postgraduate medical colleges and 23 training institutions accredited for DNB training. They reported that 20% of all medical colleges had no ophthalmology journals and 60% had ≤ two international journals. Ninety six percent of colleges had no subspecialty fellowship programs. Only 7.6% had more than five international publications in three years. The findings about poor infrastructure, poor library facilities, poor exposure to surgeries other than cataract and the absence of subspecialty programs were confirmed. Lack of motivation and inadequate input of effort seemed to be a bugbear. The lack of infrastructure in state-funded medical colleges may be due to shortage of funds, poor maintenance of equipment due to bureaucratic delays or inadequate motivation associated with poor training of teachers. Absence of adequate monetary compensation and simultaneous private practice are among the reasons for poor motivation of the faculty. Limited hours spent by the faculty at some of the medical colleges is also a constraint. So what is to be done to overcome the problem and restore the cradles of our ophthalmic human resources to health? These measures would involve manpower, infrastructure, curriculum and training methods. The faculty in medical colleges needs improved working conditions, better training, and in places, an increase in numbers. Training in subspecialties is a prime requisite. This could be undertaken by developing a well co-ordinated program by the Government of India in collaboration with state governments to send teachers to institutions of excellence for specific periods. Faculty from outside could also be deputed for short periods of about a week to the desirous medical colleges to help start the specialty services. The AIOS and the national subspecialty societies could be roped in to help provide this service. The success of a program like this would require augmentation of the infrastructure to overcome the deficiencies pointed out above. This would entail adding to the available equipment and improving its maintenance. Libraries, lecture theaters, audiovisual and internet facilities would require to be strengthened and a greater support for research would be imperative. This will again need to be done under a project conceptulalized by the ministry of health of the central government. The efforts could be augmented by provision of better teaching material to the colleges such as slide script programs, surgical teaching videos, models and specimens and provision of online journals. The AIOS should play a major role in this in line with the work being done by the American Academy of Ophthalmology. The start of Continuing medical education (CME) series by the ARC of AIOS was a good step in this direction. An effort in preparing slide script programs was also initiated by the ARC in 2001. At the same time, it would be essential to update and refine the present curriculum and system of evaluation including the provision of a countrywide uniform exit examination. A training program which entails rotation to all subspecialties, integrated teaching with other departments of relevance such as neurology, pathology and radio diagnosis, problem-based teaching, guest lectures by an outside faculty, frequent internal assessment examination including a basic science examination at the end of the first year of training and a well-designed exit examination is needed. Surgical training by senior surgeons scrubbed up and assisting through the observer microscope must be ensured. Research methodology and management training should be integral components of the curriculum. The criteria for accreditation of postgraduate programs need to be restructured. However, the keys to success would be strict enforcement and monitoring. Unless some mechanism exists for uniform enforcement at the national level, all these efforts are doomed to failure. To ensure better monitoring, a way will have to be found to strengthen the functioning of the Medical Council of India (MCI). Alternatively, the National Board of Examination (NBE) could be assigned the responsibility for monitoring of postgraduate (PG) education. They could develop panels of eminent specialists from each specialty to oversee PG education in their specialty and ensure strict compliance with the curriculum, failing which decertification may be resorted to. It is time to wake up before it is too late and to come up with a national level effort to improve ophthalmic education in the country by a co-ordinated action, in line with a program like ″The National Program for Control of Blindness″. This could be the ′Indian Program for Strengthening Ophthalmic Education′ (IPSOE), which may be funded by assistance from the World Health Organization (WHO), World Bank or other agencies. This will require coordination of several organizations including the Ministry of Health especially the ophthalmic cell of the Directorate General of Health services, the MCI, the NBE, the AIOS, the national subspecialty societies, the ministries of health and education of the state governments and several nongovernment organizations (NGOs) and institutions of excellence. It will not be easy but it can and must be done if we are to rescue the future of ophthalmology and ophthalmic services in the country. The question is ..........do we have the necessary will?

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Indian J Ophthalmol
                Indian J Ophthalmol
                IJO
                Indian Journal of Ophthalmology
                Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd (India )
                0301-4738
                1998-3689
                June 2018
                : 66
                : 6
                : 743-744
                Affiliations
                [1]Chairman of Vision Eye Centres, New Delhi, India. E-mail: akgrover55@ 123456yahoo.com
                Article
                IJO-66-743
                10.4103/ijo.IJO_328_18
                5989493
                29785979
                3f855f54-6722-446e-849d-6892a15489bd
                Copyright: © 2018 Indian Journal of Ophthalmology

                This is an open access journal, and articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as appropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

                History
                Categories
                Guest Editorial

                Ophthalmology & Optometry
                Ophthalmology & Optometry

                Comments

                Comment on this article

                Related Documents Log