2022
DOI: 10.1111/medu.14880
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Quality assurance in health professions education: Role of accreditation and licensure

Abstract: Objective: The aim of this paper is to provide an overview of the major quality assurance strategies, accreditation and licensure, in health professions education. It explores the nature of these regulatory processes using Brazil and the United States as examples because these large systems are at different ends of the developmental continuum. For each, it describes the tensions that arise, offers a critical synthesis of the evidence and maps out future directions.Results: Given wide variability among operatin… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…These may be set by higher education institutions, such as colleges or universities; by providers of postgraduate medical education, such as the Royal Colleges in the United Kingdom; or by local or global regulators of medical education, such as the General Medical Council (GMC) in the United Kingdom, or the World Federation of Medical Education (WFME). Quality assurance (QA) is a process whereby regulatory/accrediting bodies determine the extent to which quality standards are met by medical curricula accountable to them 3 . Quality improvement is generally regarded as a continuous process whereby curriculum teams use stakeholder feedback to determine whether the curriculum meets relevant standards, then implement new activities or other measures to address perceived deficiencies and subsequently re‐evaluate the quality of the curriculum 2 .…”
Section: Key Concepts and The Parameters Of This Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These may be set by higher education institutions, such as colleges or universities; by providers of postgraduate medical education, such as the Royal Colleges in the United Kingdom; or by local or global regulators of medical education, such as the General Medical Council (GMC) in the United Kingdom, or the World Federation of Medical Education (WFME). Quality assurance (QA) is a process whereby regulatory/accrediting bodies determine the extent to which quality standards are met by medical curricula accountable to them 3 . Quality improvement is generally regarded as a continuous process whereby curriculum teams use stakeholder feedback to determine whether the curriculum meets relevant standards, then implement new activities or other measures to address perceived deficiencies and subsequently re‐evaluate the quality of the curriculum 2 .…”
Section: Key Concepts and The Parameters Of This Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other papers in this issue focus on application of the concept of quality in ways that further suggest plasticity of terminology and variety in how issues related to ‘quality’ are realised. Jamieson, for example, highlights that ‘quality improvement’ is a contested term, 4 while Amaral and Norcini examine the tensions, or contradictions, inherent in formal accreditation processes 5 . They outline variability of context, purpose, processes and outcomes, the changing landscape in this area and the lack of evidence hazarded by ‘many confounding variables’.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From a global perspective, this State of the Science issue is dedicated to Quality Improvement of health professions education and addresses numerous goals across the education continuum. Amaral and Norcini 3 compare medical education accreditation and physician regulation in Brazil and the United States, providing insight into strengths and weaknesses of systems in both countries. An overarching theme throughout their analysis emphasises the use of multiple methods and modalities administered at numerous timepoints throughout a physician's education, training, and career, and how the various processes reinforce and complement each other.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An overarching theme throughout their analysis emphasises the use of multiple methods and modalities administered at numerous timepoints throughout a physician's education, training, and career, and how the various processes reinforce and complement each other. Most importantly, they highlight the ongoing need for additional research investigating the outcomes of these endeavours, especially as global crises transpire, the profession evolves, and new priorities emerge 3 …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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