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1 are medicine (CCM) via the American Board of Internal Medicine.
2 lege of Physicians and the American Board of Internal Medicine.
3 script accepted for publication in Annals of Internal Medicine.
4 form throughout the continuum of training in internal medicine.
5 ance to the student's future career plans in internal medicine.
6 ternist, community-based practice of general internal medicine.
7  strategy for residency training programs in internal medicine.
8 tients and the public and reenergize general internal medicine.
9 enarios that are relevant to the practice of internal medicine.
10 task force to redefine the domain of general internal medicine.
11 rror was discussed as an error less often in internal medicine (10 errors [48%] vs 85 errors in surge
12 eferenced to and referenced by AJE); general/internal medicine (17.9%), cancer (10.4%), and cardiovas
13 pecialties of the respondents included 55.7% internal medicine, 19.7% family medicine, and 24.6% othe
14 amily medicine, 24.20 [95% CI, 23.90-24.90], internal medicine, 25.33 [95% CI, 25.07-25.60], obstetri
15  oncology (33%), gastroenterology (27%), and internal medicine (27%).
16  by specialty (obstetrics/gynecology, 16.4%; internal medicine, 27.5%; and family or general practice
17             Respondents were affiliated with internal medicine (44.3%), surgery (42.3%), and anesthes
18 ology (8.6% vs 4.0%, P = .02), sophisticated internal medicine (7.7% vs 4.3%, P = .10), and high rati
19 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 70.90-72.98], internal medicine, 73.86 [95% CI, 73.33-74.39], obstetri
20 rthopedics; 95% CI, $3.46-$8.24) and $11.67 (internal medicine; 95% CI, $9.13-$14.21) higher than at
21  (orthopedics; 95% CI, 5.0%-11.6%) to 16.1% (internal medicine; 95% CI, 12.8%-19.5%) higher.
22 uation Summary ratings and American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) certification examination score
23 cal knowledge ratings with American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) certification examination score
24 irst-time examinees of the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) Critical Care Medicine Certific
25               In 1990, the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) ended lifelong certification by
26 he health care system, the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) Foundation and the Society of G
27 predict performance on the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) Infectious Disease Certificatio
28                            American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) initiatives encourage internist
29 participation rates of the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) show that 23% of general intern
30               In 2014, the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) substantially increased the req
31 initially certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) who passed the Internal Medicin
32 cademic Internal Medicine, American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM), ABIM Foundation, and American
33                    The Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine, American Board of Internal Medicine (
34 responded to the survey, representing 66% of internal medicine and 47% of pediatric subspecialty prog
35 CIPANTS: Randomized trial conducted with 391 internal medicine and 81 nurse practitioner trainees bet
36 tcomes (Tele-HF) trial, recruited from 33 US internal medicine and cardiology practices and examined
37        He completed postgraduate training in internal medicine and cardiovascular disease at the Brig
38 ormance to the same simulated performance by internal medicine and emergency medicine residents from
39 108 experienced attending physicians and 143 internal medicine and emergency medicine residents.
40 nto the clerkships and residency programs in internal medicine and family medicine.
41  abuse in primary care residency programs in internal medicine and family medicine: 1) integrating su
42 S) integration into the > 1000 United States internal medicine and family practice residency core cur
43               In a sample of community-based internal medicine and family practice residents, unsuper
44                                              Internal medicine and FP residents report differences in
45 , a Web-based survey was administered to 141 internal medicine and general surgery residents and 497
46 ants to foster collaboration between general internal medicine and geriatrics faculty in the training
47 en teaching and research programs in general internal medicine and geriatrics, and providing substant
48  3-year fellowship program combining general internal medicine and geriatrics.
49                                 A network of internal medicine and hematology centers across France r
50 higan, Ann Arbor, and Associate Professor in internal medicine and in molecular and integrative physi
51                                        Among internal medicine and nurse practitioner trainees, simul
52 orted to work the most hours per week, while internal medicine and pediatrics allow for the most cons
53 ounger and disproportionately represented in internal medicine and pediatrics.
54 ere were fewer consultation requests made to Internal Medicine and Psychiatry in the post-GTCS group
55 ases with errors, conference leaders in both internal medicine and surgery infrequently used explicit
56 collaboratively by the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine and the American College of Physicians
57 is position paper, the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine and the American College of Physicians
58 oup to provide a framework for physicians in internal medicine and the medical subspecialties to eval
59 ents with a complicated UTI, hospitalized at internal medicine and urology departments of 19 universi
60  staff and fellows (anesthesiology, surgery, internal medicine) and neurosurgery residents.
61 nal of Medicine, JAMA, The Lancet, Annals of Internal Medicine, and British Medical Journal); 3.4% of
62  a jury of ten persons representing surgery, internal medicine, and critical care after conferring wi
63 of palliative care, intensive care medicine, internal medicine, and family practice that competency i
64 udents to outstanding faculty role models in internal medicine, and incorporating educational experie
65 al published by the ACGME, American Board of Internal Medicine, and other specialty organizations was
66 ardiology, family practice, general surgery, internal medicine, and pediatrics) in late 2003 and earl
67 e was inclusive of pediatric intensive care, internal medicine, and surgery, nursing, ethics, organ d
68 an College of Physicians-American Society of Internal Medicine, and the American College of Cardiolog
69 an Medical Association (JAMA), the Annals of Internal Medicine (Ann Intern Med), the Annals of Surger
70 rnal medicine, substance abuse treatment and internal medicine are crucial to work with these medical
71 dicine, and residents in family medicine and internal medicine are strongly encouraged to receive tra
72                       The Society of General Internal Medicine asked a task force to redefine the dom
73  Hiatt Residency in Global Health Equity and Internal Medicine at the Brigham and Women's Hospital.
74               DESIGN, SETTING, AND SUBJECTS: Internal medicine attending and resident physicians part
75 se on the effect of varying the durations of internal medicine attending physician ward rotations.
76 kforce through expansion and enhancements of internal medicine based critical care training programs,
77 e end points in clinical trials in Annals of Internal Medicine, BMJ, Circulation, Clinical Infectious
78  and January 1998 to June 1999) in Annals of Internal Medicine, BMJ, JAMA, The Lancet, and The New En
79  cited journals were investigated: Annals of Internal Medicine, BMJ, JAMA, The Lancet, and the New En
80 rials published during May 2001 in Annals of Internal Medicine, BMJ, JAMA, The Lancet, and The New En
81 ants: 57 U.S. physicians in family medicine, internal medicine, cardiology, and orthopedics who were
82 ship to performance on the American Board of Internal Medicine Cardiovascular Disease (ABIM CVD) Cert
83 ating residents reported plans for a general internal medicine career.
84                                        Fewer internal medicine case presentations included adverse ev
85                                              Internal medicine-CCM-based fellowships have disparate p
86 d of Internal Medicine (ABIM) who passed the Internal Medicine Certification examination or sat for t
87 scores (beta = .319), followed by prior ABIM Internal Medicine Certification Examination scores (beta
88 l Licensing Examination (USMLE) scores, ABIM Internal Medicine Certification Examination scores, fell
89 Medical Licensing Examination Step, and ABIM Internal Medicine Certification Examination scores.
90  and overall first-attempt score on the ABIM Internal Medicine Certification Examination.
91               The value of American Board of Internal Medicine certification has been questioned.
92  the required fees for the American Board of Internal Medicine certifying examination; 2659 (33%) wor
93 9 veterans with at least one primary care or internal medicine clinic contact from a Northwest VA fac
94                           The setting was an internal medicine clinic of a publicly funded health sys
95 cohort study from 6 Veterans Affairs General Internal Medicine Clinics.
96                            That is, what the internal medicine community has deemed acceptable for ou
97  primary care clinicians (family practice or internal medicine) conducted 10% of visits.
98 certification status using American Board of Internal Medicine data.
99  mean age of the patients seen in pediatrics/internal medicine departments was significantly lower th
100 well as several pneumology, dermatology, and internal medicine departments.
101 r decades of silence, the German Society for Internal Medicine (DGIM) has made considerable efforts t
102 atient-specific therapeutic regimens in most internal medicine disciplines.
103 movement disorders, sleep disorders and even internal medicine disorders, such as Sandifer syndrome.
104 (86.5%) identified a specific career plan in internal medicine during PGY-3.
105                                    Annals of Internal Medicine editors develop In the Clinic from the
106                                    Annals of Internal Medicine editors develop In the Clinic from the
107                                    Annals of Internal Medicine editors develop In the Clinic in colla
108           However, the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine Education Redesign Task Force II does
109   In this article, the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine Education Redesign Task Force II exami
110 ed clinicians and investigators representing internal medicine, emergency medicine, microbiology, cri
111 ing track would lead to an American Board of Internal Medicine examination for a Certificate of Added
112 a unique way to a tiered world, with general internal medicine facing the most challenges.
113                             Although general internal medicine faculties seem receptive to further ge
114  on faculty-development programs for general internal medicine faculty, and we held focus groups and
115  done to develop geriatrics-oriented general internal medicine faculty, we identified current practic
116 e development of geriatrics-oriented general internal medicine faculty.
117 d with TPM practices for patients treated in internal medicine, family practice, and geriatrics pract
118 iders in the fields of pediatrics, oncology, internal medicine, family practice, and gynecology, as w
119 iated with pre-existing HTN, suggesting that internal medicine/family medicine physicians should refe
120 5%; inappropriate: 13% to 5.2%; p < 0.0001), internal medicine/family practice (appropriate: 51.1% to
121 eriatrics faculty in the training of general internal medicine fellows and 2) the creation of a 3-yea
122                   Experts agree that general internal medicine fellows could benefit from increased o
123 ncrease the geriatrics experience of general internal medicine fellows, and it describes the potentia
124 o integrate geriatrics training into general internal medicine fellowship programs.
125 a significant difference for students taking internal medicine first compared with obstetrics/gynecol
126  admission to and discharge from the general internal medicine floor in our community hospital over a
127 r specialized fields are Pediatrics for 65%, Internal medicine for 18.8%.
128 proved a proposal from the American Board of Internal Medicine for establishing the secondary subspec
129  this problem of cost, the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation developed the Choosing Wise
130 ment initiative led by the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation in collaboration with leadi
131 ship initiative led by the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation in collaboration with profe
132                            American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation's Choosing Wisely campaign
133 oses made in Neurology, Neuropsychology, and Internal Medicine from 1999 to 2008.
134  articles who submitted to BMJ and Annals of Internal Medicine from May through August 2001 were sent
135 tis spp. in patients who applied to the same internal medicine-gastroenterology clinic with or withou
136 ression, recruited from practices in general internal medicine, geriatrics, and family medicine, rece
137             A national survey of 438 general internal medicine (GIM) and 433 family medicine (FM) phy
138                       Differences in general internal medicine (GIM) career plans between internal me
139                       The Society of General Internal Medicine Health Disparities Task Force used a r
140 training interventional HF cardiologists and internal medicine HF specialists to meet the growing dem
141 gy attending physicians, cardiology fellows, internal medicine hospitalists, and internal medicine in
142 c chronic-relapsing CDI at the Department of Internal Medicine I at the University Hospital Schleswig
143                                Although both internal medicine (IM) and family practice (FP) physicia
144                               Success on the internal medicine (IM) examination is a central requirem
145 and medical students' interest in careers in internal medicine (IM) has declined (particularly genera
146 l for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) for internal medicine (IM) physicians to certify in critical
147 rting milestones are now required across all internal medicine (IM) residency programs.
148 he national match, but little is known about internal medicine (IM) resident perceptions of ID and fa
149 as been a recently emphasized competency for internal medicine (IM) residents, few tools to assess re
150               The In-Training Examination in Internal Medicine (IM-ITE) has been offered annually to
151 and more exposure to career opportunities in internal medicine, improving ambulatory education, expos
152 Curie Actions, Foundation for Development of Internal Medicine in Europe.
153  been considerable change in the practice of internal medicine in the past quarter century, including
154 tments of otorhinolaryngology and pediatrics/internal medicine in the Tohoku region, northern Japan.
155 idents using data collected on 2008 and 2009 Internal Medicine In-Training Examination (IM-ITE) score
156 sidents using an annual survey linked to the Internal Medicine In-Training Examination taken in Octob
157 ed during the American College of Physicians Internal Medicine In-Training Examination to assess whet
158  top five journals by 2010 impact factor, in internal medicine, infectious diseases, and HIV/AIDS.
159 ed included critical care medicine, surgery, internal medicine, infectious diseases, neurology, and l
160  by specialists in psychiatry, neurology and internal medicine/infectious diseases.
161                                 We evaluated internal medicine inpatients reporting penicillin allerg
162 eceiving care from family medicine (FPs) vs. internal medicine (internists) physicians.
163 fellows, internal medicine hospitalists, and internal medicine interns) classified individual nuclear
164  to apply it in clinical practice, Annals of Internal Medicine is launching a new "Precision Medicine
165 ge of Physicians, the publisher of Annals of Internal Medicine, is not responsible for the content or
166 the 'treating' and 'diagnosing' specialty of internal medicine, its tenets are applicable to 'non-the
167 ions published in the 6 general medicine and internal medicine journals with the highest impact facto
168 ine Certification examination or sat for the Internal Medicine Maintenance of Certification (IM-MOC)
169          The future of the American Board of Internal Medicine Maintenance of Certification (MOC) pro
170 ar medical students whose first clerkship is internal medicine may have superior performance througho
171 n psychosis or for chronic at-risk states in internal medicine may help to maintain the initial super
172            Compared with planned training in internal medicine, MD/PhD graduation was positively asso
173  surgery cases, teachers in both surgery and internal medicine missed opportunities to model recognit
174                                           In internal medicine morbidity and mortality conferences, c
175 ge percentage of general internists who left internal medicine mostly to work in another medical fiel
176 nd Vascular Institute (n=106) and in General Internal Medicine (n=89) were randomized to receive or n
177 ialties: anesthesiology, emergency medicine, internal medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics
178 per, from the Residency Review Committee for Internal Medicine of the Accreditation Council for Gradu
179 e unique value for the societies of academic internal medicine of their annual spring meetings that w
180 ned women were dermatology, family medicine, internal medicine, ophthalmology, pathology, psychiatry,
181       Of those still working in the field of internal medicine or its subspecialties, approximately h
182 91% of all participants are still working in internal medicine or its subspecialties, this percentage
183  scientists representing disciplines such as internal medicine, pathology, microbiology, radiology, s
184 ostgraduate year 1 trainees interviewing new internal medicine patients.
185 ardiology, family practice, general surgery, internal medicine, pediatrics, and psychiatry.
186 among physicians specializing in psychiatry, internal medicine, pediatrics, emergency medicine, and f
187 ng clinicians and investigators representing internal medicine, pediatrics, emergency medicine, otola
188  completing their training in 8 specialties (internal medicine, pediatrics, family practice, obstetri
189 al medicine physicians were interviewed; 621 internal medicine physician members of the American Coll
190 reated in 2001 by 2 groups of ABIM-certified internal medicine physicians (general internists).
191 4; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.6-3.5 for internal medicine physicians compared with general and f
192 representative sample of family medicine and internal medicine physicians completing residency betwee
193      We conducted a scenario-based survey of internal medicine physicians from across Canada using a
194                                           20 internal medicine physicians were interviewed; 621 inter
195 oss occupations (obstetrician-gynecologists, internal medicine physicians, family medicine physicians
196            Treatment by locum tenens general internal medicine physicians.
197 livered by locum tenens and non-locum tenens internal medicine physicians.
198 0.64; 95% CI, 0.52-0.80); and, compared with internal medicine, planned training in emergency medicin
199 ommon and important activity in primary care internal medicine practice.
200 .0%) and presenting to a US academic general internal medicine practice.
201 lace at an urban hospital-based primary care internal medicine practice; 528 adult primary care patie
202 e concordant with conditions seen in general internal medicine practices, although some areas of disc
203         Local solutions include engaging the internal medicine program director to accomplish a mutua
204                                              Internal medicine providers are in a unique position to
205 e and low back pain) commonly encountered by internal medicine providers.
206               In 1972, the American Board of Internal Medicine recognized medical oncology as a subsp
207 aining and enthusiasm for careers in general internal medicine remained low.
208 for additional training in geriatrics during internal medicine residencies.
209                                              Internal medicine residency at a university hospital in
210 ed to graduate and then obtain a first-class internal medicine residency at Parkland Hospital, where
211 hat ID is declining as a career choice among internal medicine residency graduates.
212 internal medicine (GIM) career plans between internal medicine residency program types and across res
213                               Importance: US internal medicine residency programs are now required to
214 nd Participants: Cross-sectional study of US internal medicine residency programs in the 2013-2014 ac
215 ey to resident physicians at 31 diverse U.S. internal medicine residency programs nationwide.
216 s" for integrating geriatrics education into internal medicine residency programs, 2) barriers to imp
217 coming these barriers: engaging directors of internal medicine residency programs, funding centers to
218            Recommendations and practices for internal medicine residency training in procedures shoul
219                                      General internal medicine residency training should provide both
220                                              Internal medicine residency training should remain a 3-y
221 act during medical school, as well as during internal medicine residency training.
222 luster-randomized noninferiority trial in 63 internal-medicine residency programs during the 2015-201
223                      We randomly assigned 63 internal-medicine residency programs in the United State
224 e is known about the timing and stability of internal medicine resident career decisions during the c
225 2015, in the waiting rooms of the outpatient internal medicine resident clinic at Mount Sinai Hospita
226                       One-hundred two of 164 internal medicine residents (62%) completed the survey.
227 the 2013-2014 academic year, including 21284 internal medicine residents (7048 postgraduate-year 1 [P
228 nts (n = 12), their classmates (n = 18), and internal medicine residents (n = 33).
229 heir classmates and 37% higher than those of internal medicine residents (P < .001 for both).
230 lf-perceived medical errors are common among internal medicine residents and are associated with subs
231 CIPANTS: Comparative study of 148 first-year internal medicine residents at Mayo Clinic from July 1,
232  cohort study of categorical and preliminary internal medicine residents at Mayo Clinic Rochester.
233  cohort study of categorical and preliminary internal medicine residents at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, M
234  the inaugural 25 postgraduate years 2 and 3 internal medicine residents before and after the 2-week
235                                    Forty-six internal medicine residents completed assessments given
236 urvey data to characterize the proportion of internal medicine residents in 2016 who self-reported ha
237 dents, representing 74.1% of all eligible US internal medicine residents in the 2008-2009 academic ye
238          Conclusions and Relevance: Among US internal medicine residents in the 2013-2014 academic ye
239 nd sustained improvements in the training of internal medicine residents in the care of older adults
240                               In a subset of internal medicine residents in the class of 2004, career
241 between debt and reported career plans among internal medicine residents is unknown.
242 9 pulmonary and critical care fellows, and 5 internal medicine residents rotating in the ICU.
243 ssions improve the educational experience of internal medicine residents rotating in the MICU without
244                                        Since internal medicine residents rotating on our infectious d
245                                      General internal medicine residents should have options to tailo
246        Little current evidence documents how internal medicine residents spend their time at work, pa
247             At this Swiss teaching hospital, internal medicine residents spent more time at work than
248 esponsible for teaching medical students and internal medicine residents to care for elderly patients
249 GN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A study of US internal medicine residents using an annual survey linke
250  DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Study of internal medicine residents using data collected on 2008
251             Objective: To compare ratings of internal medicine residents using the pre-2015 resident
252                                              Internal medicine residents were more likely to report b
253                                           36 internal medicine residents with an average of 29 months
254  has effectively demonstrated improvement in internal medicine residents' comfort with and knowledge
255 s compared with that of peers and graduates (internal medicine residents).
256 207 US eligible categorical and primary care internal medicine residents, 57,087 (84.9%) completed an
257                                        Among internal medicine residents, higher levels of fatigue an
258  common than subspecialty career plans among internal medicine residents, including those in primary
259                    In this national study of internal medicine residents, suboptimal QOL and symptoms
260 URES: Self-reported ultimate career plans of internal medicine residents.
261 h differences in reported career plans among internal medicine residents.
262       Multiprogram cross-sectional survey of internal medicine residents.
263 ible ways to improve geriatrics training for internal medicine residents.
264 he use of the microbiology online modules by internal medicine residents.
265  of policies varied by subject category: all internal medicine, respiratory medicine, and toxicology
266 central requirement of the American Board of Internal Medicine's (ABIM's) Maintenance of Certificatio
267 n College of Physicians--American Society of Internal Medicine's core ethical principles for external
268                        The American Board of Internal Medicine's Maintenance of Certification program
269 icenter cohort study of patients admitted to internal medicine services (N = 230701) at 10 university
270                                          For internal medicine services at 2 hospitals, implementatio
271 ns and Relevance: Among patients admitted to internal medicine services in 10 Veterans Affairs hospit
272 (ABIM) Foundation and the Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM) have identified "routine health
273        Moving forward, the American Board of Internal Medicine should cocreate MOC with the physician
274 dical care and the challenges facing general internal medicine should spur innovation.
275 to its core values and competencies, general internal medicine should stay both broad and deep, rangi
276   Compared with obstetricians/gynecologists, internal medicine specialists and family or general prac
277 geted at allergists, clinical immunologists, internal medicine specialists, pediatricians, general pr
278 rch pales in comparison with those for other internal medicine specialties, especially cardiology and
279    Fourth-year medical students (n = 124) in internal medicine subinternships at the University of Il
280 arate program requirements compared to other internal medicine subspecialties and adult CCM fellowshi
281 s earlier and is more dispersed in time than internal medicine subspecialties that continue to use a
282 erating, and with the fellowship markets for internal medicine subspecialties that continue to use a
283 d healthcare models involving mental health, internal medicine, substance abuse treatment and interna
284 nly 3% of all anemic patients, and better in internal medicine than in cardiology clinics.
285 sk is usually to decide with what disease in internal medicine these complaints are associated.
286  geriatrics, oncology, gastroenterology, and internal medicine, this ratio was even greater (1 out of
287 physicians in training, we surveyed incoming internal medicine trainees about their general knowledge
288 s distributed during orientation to incoming internal medicine trainees at a single urban teaching ho
289                      In this study, incoming internal medicine trainees had inadequate knowledge rega
290  and the actual time that residents spent in internal medicine training before each examination.
291  improve with year of training time spent in internal medicine training before the examination and ti
292 events and errors are routinely discussed in internal medicine training programs.
293 design Task Force II does not favor reducing internal medicine training to less than 36 months as par
294 a valid measure of knowledge acquired during internal medicine training.
295 roups and structured interviews with general internal medicine unit chiefs and directors of Geriatric
296 al asthma of the patients seen in pediatrics/internal medicine was significantly higher, and nasal sy
297      The percentage of physicians in general internal medicine who were identified as hospitalists in
298  we identified 120,226 physicians in general internal medicine who were providing care to older patie
299 To ensure its growth and prosperity, general internal medicine will need to embrace care of the elder
300 e definitive research, residency training in internal medicine with Advanced Cardiac Life Support ins

 
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