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Canadian Medical Association Journal logoLink to Canadian Medical Association Journal
. 1966 Apr 9;94(15):800–805.

The Resident's View of Residency Training in Canada

D G Fish
PMCID: PMC1935407  PMID: 5908725

Abstract

In the view of residents in their last year of specialty training, the Fellowship is now becoming the operative standard for obtaining hospital privileges in urban centres and they felt that this implied that the two standards, the Certificate and the Fellowship of the Royal College, were not achieving the purpose for which they were designed. Although 80% of the residents intended to write the Fellowship, few viewed a year in a basic science department or in research as of intrinsic value in terms of their future practice.

The examinations of the Royal College were the subject of criticism, most residents feeling that the examinations did not test the knowledge and ability gained in training. Most expressed a desire for ongoing evaluation during the training period.

Service responsibilities were generally regarded as too heavy.

Despite the criticism of both training and examination, most residents felt that their training had provided them with the experience and background they needed to practise as specialists.

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