About this Research Topic
This Research Topic aims to stimulate awareness in the scientific community, especially for those involved in postgraduate education and policy-making decisions. It will highlight the need for developing competency-based education as a powerful mechanism to align education and training with health system priorities. This holds particular value for resource-limited countries, where the knowledge and skills of rehabilitation doctors need to reflect not only the population's health profile, but also the strengths and weaknesses (e.g. workforce gaps and maldistributions) of the health system. This goal can be achieved through sharing experiences between those who have engaged themselves in the process of program development, curriculum design and competency-based education in rehabilitation. Over the last 25 years the number of papers addressing the issue of residency education in PRM has exponentially increased testifying the interest towards the role of rehabilitation and, more specifically, of the PRM doctors as leaders of the rehabilitation team.
All researchers and rehabilitation professionals involved in postgraduate education and training of PRM doctors are encouraged to submit contributions describing and discussing:
- examples of the current and near-future realistic approaches to PRM education in different countries, highlighting strategies to ensure the highest level of postgraduate training as a means to support high quality interventions of the PRM specialists in disability and health care.
- the core values, the knowledge and competences a PRM specialist should exhibit, and how to appraise their achievement during postgraduate training, with specific reference to the concept of Entrustable Professional Activities.
- the assessment of knowledge and competences to certify the achievement of international standards in PRM education from different countries, through examinations, as they allow to ascertain and certify the achievement of international standards in PRM education, and hence in rehabilitation care delivery worldwide
- how the competency-based education for PRM trainees has changed during the COVID-19 pandemic
Keywords: Education, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, Postgraduate training, Core curriculum, Health technology assessment
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.