TY - JOUR
T1 - Propuesta de contenidos mínimos para los programas docentes de pregrado en medicina geriátrica en América Latina
AU - Cano, Carlos
AU - Gutiérrez, Luis Miguel
AU - Marín, Pedro Paulo
AU - Morales Martínez, Fernando
AU - Pelaéz, Martha
AU - Rodríguez Mañas, Leocadio
AU - Vega, Enrique
AU - Zúñiga, Clemente
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - In the developing countries of the world, an aging of the population in general is occurring at the same time that the life expectancy of older adults is increasing. The results of this double aging process are especially striking for health care services because of the concurrent epidemiologic transition, which has led to infectious diseases being replaced by noninfectious, habitually chronic diseases that occur predominantly in older age. In these circumstances, older adults begin to predominate among the patients whom physicians in Latin America now serve, and in the near future, older adults will constitute the immense majority of those patients. To respond to this situation, the training of professionals responsible for providing care to older adults should be improved, and the preparation of specialists in geriatric medicine should be enhanced both quantitatively and qualitatively. Future doctors should have the knowledge, abilities, and attitudes to enable them to appropriately serve this population segment. With these aims in mind, structures and procedures should be established that make it possible to impart the specific contents of geriatric medicine during medical school not only as a part of the traditional vertical teaching of the core curriculum of geriatric medicine, but also through the horizontal teaching of some of the material in other subjects. This article discusses why, with what objectives, with what contents, with what procedures, and with what staffing and materials the training of professionals in geriatric medicine should be carried out, and why it is time to give priority to this undertaking. Putting into place the measures proposed in this article should facilitate the incorporation of this subject matter into the curricula of the medical schools of Latin America.
AB - In the developing countries of the world, an aging of the population in general is occurring at the same time that the life expectancy of older adults is increasing. The results of this double aging process are especially striking for health care services because of the concurrent epidemiologic transition, which has led to infectious diseases being replaced by noninfectious, habitually chronic diseases that occur predominantly in older age. In these circumstances, older adults begin to predominate among the patients whom physicians in Latin America now serve, and in the near future, older adults will constitute the immense majority of those patients. To respond to this situation, the training of professionals responsible for providing care to older adults should be improved, and the preparation of specialists in geriatric medicine should be enhanced both quantitatively and qualitatively. Future doctors should have the knowledge, abilities, and attitudes to enable them to appropriately serve this population segment. With these aims in mind, structures and procedures should be established that make it possible to impart the specific contents of geriatric medicine during medical school not only as a part of the traditional vertical teaching of the core curriculum of geriatric medicine, but also through the horizontal teaching of some of the material in other subjects. This article discusses why, with what objectives, with what contents, with what procedures, and with what staffing and materials the training of professionals in geriatric medicine should be carried out, and why it is time to give priority to this undertaking. Putting into place the measures proposed in this article should facilitate the incorporation of this subject matter into the curricula of the medical schools of Latin America.
KW - Education, medical, undergraduate
KW - Geriatrics
KW - Latin America
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=21644482087&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1590/S1020-49892005000500015
DO - 10.1590/S1020-49892005000500015
M3 - Artículo de revisión
C2 - 16053653
AN - SCOPUS:21644482087
SN - 1020-4989
VL - 17
SP - 429
EP - 437
JO - Revista Panamericana de Salud Publica/Pan American Journal of Public Health
JF - Revista Panamericana de Salud Publica/Pan American Journal of Public Health
IS - 5-6
ER -