Litcius/Paper detail

Quality assurance in health professions education: Role of accreditation and licensure

Eliana Amaral, John J. Norcini

2022Medical Education47 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this paper is to provide an overview of the major quality assurance strategies, accreditation and licensure, in health professions education. It explores the nature of these regulatory processes using Brazil and the United States as examples because these large systems are at different ends of the developmental continuum. For each, it describes the tensions that arise, offers a critical synthesis of the evidence and maps out future directions. RESULTS: Given wide variability among operating medical schools in curricular design, length of study, resources and facilities for clinical training and supervision, the nature of regulatory bodies varies considerably. Nonetheless, they share tensions related purpose and process including quality assurance versus quality improvement, outcomes versus process and continuous versus episodic evaluations and assessments. Clear evidence of effectiveness, especially for accreditation, is scarce and difficult to obtain, particularly as it relates to health outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Regulatory processes need to be built around clear definitions of the goals for each stage of professional development, the current movement towards competency-based education and the variable durations of medical education. These changes must motivate revisions in the content and process of programmes for accreditation and licensure, complimentary efforts towards quality of care, and stimulate a significant research effort.

Topics & Concepts

AccreditationLicensureQuality assuranceMedical educationQuality (philosophy)Process (computing)Health careMedicinePsychologyPublic relationsPolitical scienceComputer scienceEpistemologyPathologyPhilosophyOperating systemExternal quality assessmentLawInnovations in Medical EducationHealthcare Quality and ManagementMedical Malpractice and Liability Issues