TY - JOUR
T1 - The American College of Academic International Medicine 2017 Consensus Statement on International Medical Programs
T2 - Establishing a system of objective valuation and quantitative metrics to facilitate the recognition and incorporation of academic international medical efforts into existing promotion and tenure paradigms
AU - Peck, Gregory
AU - Garg, Manish
AU - Arquilla, Bonnie
AU - Gracias, Vicente
AU - Anderson, Harry
AU - Miller, Andrew
AU - Hansoti, Bhakti
AU - Ferrada, Paula
AU - Firstenberg, Michael
AU - Galwankar, Sagar
AU - Gist, Ramon
AU - Jeanmonod, Donald
AU - Jeanmonod, Rebecca
AU - Krebs, Elizabeth
AU - McDonald, Marian
AU - Nwomeh, Benedict
AU - Orlando, James
AU - Paladino, Lorenzo
AU - Papadimos, Thomas
AU - Ricca, Robert
AU - Sakran, Joseph
AU - Sharpe, Richard
AU - Swaroop, Mamta
AU - Stawicki, Stanislaw P.
PY - 2017/10/1
Y1 - 2017/10/1
N2 - The growth of academic international medicine (AIM) as a distinct field of expertise resulted in increasing participation by individual and institutional actors from both high-income and low-And-middle-income countries. This trend resulted in the gradual evolution of international medical programs (IMPs). With the growing number of students, residents, and educators who gravitate toward nontraditional forms of academic contribution, the need arose for a system of formalized metrics and quantitative assessment of AIM-and IMP-related efforts. Within this emerging paradigm, an institution's 'return on investment' from faculty involvement in AIM and participation in IMPs can be measured by establishing equivalency between international work and various established academic activities that lead to greater institutional visibility and reputational impact. The goal of this consensus statement is to provide a basic framework for quantitative assessment and standardized metrics of professional effort attributable to active faculty engagement in AIM and participation in IMPs. Implicit to the current work is the understanding that the proposed system should be flexible and adaptable to the dynamically evolving landscape of AIM-an increasingly important subset of general academic medical activities.
AB - The growth of academic international medicine (AIM) as a distinct field of expertise resulted in increasing participation by individual and institutional actors from both high-income and low-And-middle-income countries. This trend resulted in the gradual evolution of international medical programs (IMPs). With the growing number of students, residents, and educators who gravitate toward nontraditional forms of academic contribution, the need arose for a system of formalized metrics and quantitative assessment of AIM-and IMP-related efforts. Within this emerging paradigm, an institution's 'return on investment' from faculty involvement in AIM and participation in IMPs can be measured by establishing equivalency between international work and various established academic activities that lead to greater institutional visibility and reputational impact. The goal of this consensus statement is to provide a basic framework for quantitative assessment and standardized metrics of professional effort attributable to active faculty engagement in AIM and participation in IMPs. Implicit to the current work is the understanding that the proposed system should be flexible and adaptable to the dynamically evolving landscape of AIM-an increasingly important subset of general academic medical activities.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85038374408
UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85038374408&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4103/IJCIIS.IJCIIS_64_17
DO - 10.4103/IJCIIS.IJCIIS_64_17
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85038374408
SN - 2229-5151
VL - 7
SP - 201
EP - 211
JO - International Journal of Critical Illness and Injury Science
JF - International Journal of Critical Illness and Injury Science
IS - 4
ER -