Education and training in internal medicine in Europe

Autor: H.F.P. Hillen
Rok vydání: 2002
Předmět:
Zdroj: European Journal of Internal Medicine. 13:154-159
ISSN: 0953-6205
DOI: 10.1016/s0953-6205(02)00023-7
Popis: Sir William Osler was the Regius Professor of Medicine in Oxford at the end of World War I. In those days there was a great demand for postgraduate medical education. This was the motive for the foundation of the Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine, under the presidency of William Osler. Osler himself had received his postgraduate education in Europe, from 1872 to 1874, during a two year sabbatical leave in teaching clinics in Germany. It was during this period that internal medicine was introduced as a specialty in the schools of medicine in Berlin, Gottingen, and Vienna.1 Postgraduate education in these clinics was directed at the practice of clinical medicine and was based on the latest advances in physiology, bacteriology, and pathology. The switch from mere observation to understanding had been made. William Osler was one of the first medical teachers who realised that this paradigm shift towards pathophysiology, from knowing to knowing how, had significant implications for medical education. He wrote about this on several occasions, and his main message was: do not try to teach the student too much, but give him good methods, and a proper point of view, and all other things will be added, as his experience grows.2 Self directed, problem based learning “avant la lettre”. With this quotation by the most cited author on medical education, I thought that I could easily accept the invitation to present the Fellowship of Postgraduate Education lecture on the subject of postgraduate education in internal medicine in Europe. After all, internal medicine was invented in Europe, William Osler, respected in the Old and in the New world, had prescribed the teaching method already, and all I had just to do was describe the good methods and the proper point of view. I completely agree with Osler's point …
Databáze: OpenAIRE