D
deleted564680
Hello all, just wanted to get a conversation going about the possible future of DOs....
Fact:
- Merger of AOA/ACGME by 2020 and all residency programs must meet initial criteria by 2020 to be valid to continue
- All programs will be either 1. ACGME or 2. ACGME with "osteopathic principles" (all applicants may apply to either type with MDs likely required to pass an initial "test" on "osteopathic principles")
Speculation: With the merger and strict ACGME guidelines....
- No laxity in guidelines likely, many former AOA residency programs will have to adapt, merge, or close yielding a possible 10-40% loss of residency programs that will not be able to qualify
= Loss of AOA subspecialty residencies will greatly reduce specialty trained DOs
= Possibility of DO degree becoming a "primary care" degree when MDs allowed into former AOA specialty programs and DOs still discriminated against in ACGME specialty programs
- ACGME is residency governing body, the next step possibly will be standardized accreditation for medical schools
= This could lead to many DO schools that "qualify" to apply for and offer MD degrees instead of DO
= Many DO schools could close...have heard somewhere in the range of 25-40% of DO schools would currently meet standards
= Erasing of DO degree??? Those who have read history will realize this was attempted many times by the AMA in the last 100 years
Sources for above: 2 AOA residency DMEs, 1 Medical school dean, and http://www.acgme.org/acgmeweb/Portals/0/PDFs/Nasca-Community/FAQs.pdf
Overall:
- Loss of a good chunk of AOA residencies?
- Loss of DO specialists going forward?
- Loss of DO schools/stoppage of DO school expansion?
- Loss of new DO degrees being conferred at all after schools either switch to MD granting or close???
- Are these losses "acceptable" to have a standardization of medical schools and residencies across the country?
This is all just for conversation and fun to talk about. I think it would be interesting to hear many sides, especially those who are strong DO supporters and those who wouldn't mind trading in their DO for an MD.
Fact:
- Merger of AOA/ACGME by 2020 and all residency programs must meet initial criteria by 2020 to be valid to continue
- All programs will be either 1. ACGME or 2. ACGME with "osteopathic principles" (all applicants may apply to either type with MDs likely required to pass an initial "test" on "osteopathic principles")
Speculation: With the merger and strict ACGME guidelines....
- No laxity in guidelines likely, many former AOA residency programs will have to adapt, merge, or close yielding a possible 10-40% loss of residency programs that will not be able to qualify
= Loss of AOA subspecialty residencies will greatly reduce specialty trained DOs
= Possibility of DO degree becoming a "primary care" degree when MDs allowed into former AOA specialty programs and DOs still discriminated against in ACGME specialty programs
- ACGME is residency governing body, the next step possibly will be standardized accreditation for medical schools
= This could lead to many DO schools that "qualify" to apply for and offer MD degrees instead of DO
= Many DO schools could close...have heard somewhere in the range of 25-40% of DO schools would currently meet standards
= Erasing of DO degree??? Those who have read history will realize this was attempted many times by the AMA in the last 100 years
Sources for above: 2 AOA residency DMEs, 1 Medical school dean, and http://www.acgme.org/acgmeweb/Portals/0/PDFs/Nasca-Community/FAQs.pdf
Overall:
- Loss of a good chunk of AOA residencies?
- Loss of DO specialists going forward?
- Loss of DO schools/stoppage of DO school expansion?
- Loss of new DO degrees being conferred at all after schools either switch to MD granting or close???
- Are these losses "acceptable" to have a standardization of medical schools and residencies across the country?
This is all just for conversation and fun to talk about. I think it would be interesting to hear many sides, especially those who are strong DO supporters and those who wouldn't mind trading in their DO for an MD.