Training programs move
toward harmonization
Europeans need common
framework for training, education, and
accreditation
--Prof. Jose Ignacio Bilbao
Europe is debating the
acceptance of a common legal framework, a single
constitution, for all European nations. This is
a challenge, as was the free circulation treaty
and the introduction of the euro as a common
currency. Through alternating moments of
shake-up and tranquillity, Europe is advancing
in stages toward unification.
A wave of harmonization is suffusing entire
national and international structures and
organizations of our sometimes ankylosed
continent. Will we radiologists also be capable
of constructing a common framework for such
basics as training, professional career paths,
and continuous education and accreditation?
The European Association of Radiology
executive committee has charged the education
committee, together with the Professional
Organisation Committee-Union of Medical
Specialists, to prepare a basic program for
residents in training, common for all European
centers.
Gathering information has been a fundamental
step, accomplished by surveys, to learn
firsthand the situation of different training
programs across Europe. A visiting program of
teaching centers has allowed assessment in situ
of the specific development of each training
syllabus in a broad group of European hospitals.
Together with representatives of several
nations, the education board has developed a
draft of the proposed training program, which
was presented during the European Congress of
Radiology session, Harmonization of training
programs: myth or reality? The session was part
of the Challenges for European radiology
presentation coordinated by Prof. P.A. Grenier,
chair of the European Association of Radiology
education board. It addressed several questions:
What type of radiologists will have to be
trained? What are society's needs?
The profile of the specialist has long been
"clinical radiologists actively involved in the
diagnostic and therapeutic process of the
patients." Although the data are still not
clear, about 65% to 70% of European radiologists
define themselves as general radiologists,
perhaps specializing in two or three areas of
knowledge. About 30% to 35% are sub- or
superspecialized radiologists in one or two
areas such as neuroradiology.
The training program should accommodate both
possibilities, which are in no way opposed but
are essential for harmonious development of the
specialty, well-balanced operation of
departments, and the ability to answer the needs
of society. The general radiologists attend to
important and difficult duties by solving the
diagnostic or therapeutic guidance problems of
patients and by teaching students and residents.
The superspecialists have the responsibility of
being the best in their field. They must be
knowledgeable about patients' specific problems;
capable of innovation and research in new,
diagnostic, and therapeutic applications; and
able to expand the confines of the specialty.
Few disciplines in current medicine are as
innovative as interventional radiology, for
example. Ongoing research in the development of
new image-guided percutaneous tools, the basis
of interventional radiology, will continue to
open new therapeutic horizons.
We European radiologists have an interesting
challenge ahead of us. We must discover how to
harmonize the training peculiarities of each
country and the characteristics of
superspecialization. We should be aware of the
challenges the new administrative structures
pose and be ready not only to adapt but to move
ahead in this always-changing scenario of
high-quality medicine.
Prof. Bilbao is director of radiology at the
Clinical University of Navarra, Spain.