Journal ArticleOpen Access
Residency perception survey among neurosurgery residents in lower-middle-income countries: grassroots evaluation of neurosurgery education
Authors
Author Affiliations
National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, State University of Bangladesh
Published InNeurosurgical FOCUS
Year2020
Citations45
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The evolution of the neurosurgical specialty in lower-middle-income countries is uniformly a narrative of continuous struggle for recognition and resource allocation. Therefore, it is not surprising that neurosurgical education and residency training in these countries is relatively nascent. Dr. Harvey Cushing in 1901 declared that he would specialize in neurosurgery and gave his greatest contribution to the advancement of neurosurgical education by laying the foundations of a structured residency training program. Similar efforts in lower-middle-income countries have been impeded by economic instability and the lack of well-established medical education paradigms. The authors sought to evaluate the residency programs in these nations by conducting a survey among the biggest stakeholders in these educational programs: the neurosurgical residents. METHODS: A questionnaire…
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