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Letter to Editor
12 (
2
); 116-119
doi:
10.25259/JCH_8_2024

Graduate Medical Education Regulations 2023: A Community Medicine Perspective

Department of Community Medicine, Bhaarath Medical College and Hospital, Bharath Institute of Higher Education and Research, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.

*Corresponding author: Kalaivani Annadurai, Department of Community Medicine, Bhaarath Medical College and Hospital, Bharath Institute of Higher Education and Research, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. drkalaivani@bmch.ac.in

Licence
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, transform, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

How to cite this article: Annadurai K, Sharath U. Graduate Medical Education Regulations 2023: A Community Medicine Perspective. J Compr Health. 2024;12:116-9. doi: 10.25259/JCH_8_2024

Dear Editor,

The new Graduate Medical Education Regulations (GMER) was released by the National Medical Commission and was brought into effect from August 1, 2023. The new GMER-2023 has evolved from the key principles of Regulations on Graduate Medical Education, 1997 and GMER, 2019, and adapted them in the current context of advancement in medical education, emerging diseases, changing sociodemographic and economic scenarios, and advancement in science and technology while meeting the expectations of the stakeholders and aligning with the global trends.1,2

In the GMER-2023, several revisions have been made, which include the reduction of the duration of I Professional MBBS to 12 months, including the foundation course, and the reduction of the III Professional year (Part-1) to 11 + 1 month including electives, and increased the teaching hours for Community Medicine. Other changes include the incorporation of teaching hours for the family adoption program (FAP) within the schedule, and the duration of classroom teaching hours has been reduced to accommodate experiential learning through FAP2,3 [Table 1].

Table 1: Comparison between GMER-2019 and GMER-2023.
I professional MBBS II professional MBBS III professional MBBS (part 1)
GMER 2019 GMER 2023 GMER 2019 GMER 2023 GMER 2019 GMER 2023
Total duration 14 months (inclusive of foundation course for 1 month) 12 months (inclusive of foundation course for 1 week+spread over 6 months) 12 months 12 months 13 months+2 months electives 11 months+1 month electives
Lectures 20 h 20 h 20 h 15 h 40 h 55 h
SGL 27 h 20 h 30 h -- 60 h 70 h
SDL 05 h -- 10 h 10 h 05 h 20 h
Total teaching hours 60 h 40 h 60 h 25 h 105 h 145 h
FAP 27 h 27 h 30 h 30 h 21 h 21 (for field visits, under SGL)+10 (for log book submission, under SDL)
Foundation course 08 h (visit to Community Health Center) 08 h (visit to Community Health Center) -- -- -- --
AETCOM -- -- -- -- 25 h with 5 modules commonly given for all four III Year departments 5 h (1 h Lectures+2 h SGL+2 h SDL)
Exclusive for Community Medicine
Pandemic module -- -- 12 (Lectures+c+ SDL) 12 h under SDL 18 (Lectures +SGL+SDL) 18 h, under Lectures
Clinical postings -- -- 04 weeks 04 weeks 06 weeks 04 weeks

GMER: Graduate medical education regulations, FAP: Family adoption program, SDL: Self-directed learning, SGL: Small group discussions/learning, AETCOM: Attitude Ethics and Communications

The departments have been allotted specific competencies under AETCOM across the phases. The AETCOM competencies 3.5A – “Identify, discuss, and defend medico-legal, socio-cultural, professional, and ethical issues as they pertain to the physician-patient relationship (including fiduciary duty) and Identify” and 3.5B – “discuss physician’s role and responsibility to society and the community that she/he serves” are allocated for community medicine.2

More importantly, the duration of the clinical postings is reduced to 4 weeks in the III Professional year from 6 weeks. The total duration of interactive lecture sessions increased from 80 h to 90 h from I MBBS to III MBBS Part I. However, the cumulative small group discussions/learning (SGL) duration has been reduced from 117 h to 90 h from I MBBS to III MBBS Part I and no SGL for Phase II. Self-directed learning (SDL) duration has been modified in such a way that there is no SDL in Phase I, no change in hours (10 h) in Phase II, and duration increased from 5 h to 20 h in Phase III-part I under SDL. Specific modules are allocated for AETCOM (Attitude Ethics and Communication) in Community Medicine1,2,4 [Table 1].

According to GMER, 2023, to declare a candidate as pass in Community Medicine, the learner must secure a minimum of 50% marks in aggregate in Community Medicine Paper I and II together to pass the subject. Further, the candidate shall obtain 50% marks in the university examination separately in theory and in practical (practical includes practical/clinical and viva voce) to be declared as passed in that subject. In GMER 2019, the learner must secure at least 40% marks in each of the papers (Community Medicine Paper I and II) with a minimum of 50% of marks in aggregate (both papers together) to pass the examination. Even though the eligibility for writing the university examinations is the same (Minimum 40% separately for theory and practical and 50% cumulative in internal assessment (IA) for eligibility in Summative examination), certain modifications in the internal assessment criteria between GMER, 2019 and GMER, 2023 are made with some mark translation of SDL, home assignments, and attendance in the current regulations [Tables 2 and 3].1,2,5

To summarize, GMER 2023 has emphasized the family adoption program more, allocated more teaching hours in Phase III, especially in lectures, than SGL, and given detailed directions for internal assessment mark allocation compared to GMER 2019 recommendations.

Table 2: Mark allocation for Internal Assessment for Community Medicine under GMER 2023 (Theory)
S.No. Roll No. Name of Student Formative Assessment Theory Continuous Internal Assessment Theory Continuous percent of Theory & Practical
1st PCT Theory 2nd PCT Theory Prelims Theory (Paper I & II) Model exam Continuous Class Test (LMS) Home assignment Seminar Museum study Library assignment Attendance Theory Total Percentage Theory (Minimum cut off 40%) Theory + Practical =500+500=1000 (Minimum cut off 50%)
Self-Directed Learning Note: Minimum 40% separately for theory and practical and 50% cumulative in IA for eligibility in Summative examination
100 100 200 30 15 15 15 15 10 500 %
1
2
3

PCT: Part Completion Test in Internal Assessment, LMS: Learning Management System, IA: Internal Assessment, GMER: Graduate medical education regulations

Table 3: Mark allocation for Internal Assessment for Community Medicine under GMER 2023 (Practical)
S.No. Roll No. Name of Student Formative Assessment Continuous Internal Assessment (Practical)
1st PCT Practical/First Ward Leaving Examination 2nd PCT Practical/Second Ward Leaving Examination Prelims Practical Model exam Log Book (150) Journal (Record book/Portfolio) Attendance (Practical) Total Percentage Practical (Minimum cut off 40%)
Certifiable skill based competencies (Through OSPE/OSCE/Sports/Exercise/Other FAP Competencies AETCOM Competencies SVL Lab activity
100 100 100 60 30 30 30 40 10 500 %
1
2

OSCE: Objective Structured Clinical Examination, OSPE: Objective Structured Practical Examination, SVL: Stimulated Virtual Lab, FAP: Family Adoption Program, AETCOM: Attitude Ethics and Communication, GMER: Graduate medical education regulations

Ethical approval

The Institutional Review Board approval is not required.

Declaration of patient consent

Patient consent was not required as there are no patients in this study.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts of interest.

Use of artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted technology for manuscript preparation

The authors confirm that there was no use of artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted technology for assisting in the writing or editing of the manuscript and no images were manipulated using AI.

Financial support and sponsorship

Nil.

References

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