This year鈥檚 Consortium of Accelerated Medical Pathway Programs (CAMPP) brought together educators, deans, and policy experts to look at the evidence for and methods used to shorten the path to obtain a medical degree.
Credit: Joe Carrotta
A decade ago, the idea of graduating from medical school in three years was considered, at best, a niche experiment. On July 10, leaders from more than 40 medical schools gathered at 91短视频 Grossman School of Medicine to demonstrate just how far that idea has come鈥攁nd where it might be headed next.
Hosted by 91短视频 Grossman School of Medicine, the annual conference of the Consortium of Accelerated Medical Pathway Programs (CAMPP) convened educators, deans, and policy experts from across the United States, Canada, and Australia to explore innovations in accelerated medical education and to affirm the growing consensus that shortening the path to becoming a doctor is no longer radical鈥攊t鈥檚 necessary.
鈥淚t鈥檚 so impressive to see how three-year MD programs have grown鈥攁nd how we鈥檝e developed as a group,鈥 said Joan F. Cangiarella, MD, the consortium鈥檚 founder and chair, and 91短视频 Langone Health鈥檚 senior associate dean for education, faculty, and academic affairs. 鈥淣ot just in thinking about best practices in medical education, but in proving to the rest of the world that you can graduate medical school in three years.鈥
When Dr. Cangiarella launched CAMPP in 2015 with support from the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation, only eight schools had committed to the accelerated model. Today, the consortium spans more than 40 institutions, many of which report that their accelerated students not only secure competitive residencies and carry less debt鈥攖ypically saving between $70,000 and $100,000鈥攂ut also excel academically.
That academic performance is backed by data: , published last year in Academic Medicine, found that three-year graduates perform as well鈥攐r better鈥攖han their four-year peers across nearly every major metric of clinical skill and knowledge.
鈥淎cross the world, we鈥檙e seeing these new models take root,鈥 Dr. Cangiarella said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e even seeing a three-year MD program emerge in Australia, which shows how far this model has come.鈥
In the United States, a worsening shortage of physicians鈥攅specially in primary care鈥攈as fueled renewed interest in accelerated medical education. To help address that gap, in July 2019 91短视频 Langone Health opened its second medical school, 91短视频 Grossman Long Island School of Medicine, which was the first in the country to offer a three-year MD program dedicated exclusively to training primary care physicians. But for members of the consortium, the urgency goes beyond workforce numbers. They see in this moment a broader opportunity to reimagine how doctors are trained in an era increasingly shaped by technology.
In a keynote that captured both the pace and potential of emerging technologies, , associate dean for educational informatics at 91短视频 Grossman School of Medicine and director of the , laid out how artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping every facet of medicine鈥攆rom diagnosis to medical school curricula.
鈥淎I is no longer just a tool,鈥 Dr. Triola said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a bidirectional colleague. It鈥檚 already more accurate than physicians at generating diagnoses in certain contexts. And our students are learning alongside it鈥攚hether we formally teach it or not.鈥
He outlined 91短视频 Grossman School of Medicine鈥檚 emerging model of 鈥減recision medical education,鈥 in which data from students鈥 clinical encounters, assessments, and digital learning platforms are continuously analyzed to personalize their educational paths. At 91短视频 Langone, AI already recommends readings based on patients鈥 electronic health records and flags students who may benefit from early intervention.
鈥淎I allows us to move from a reactive model鈥斺榰h-oh, this student failed鈥欌攖o a proactive and even preventive one,鈥 Dr. Triola said. 鈥淲ho鈥檚 likely to struggle? Who needs more coaching? That鈥檚 the promise.鈥
As the conference wound down with a rooftop reception, attendees reflected on the remarkable trajectory of the consortium鈥攁nd the leadership that helped shape it.
鈥淵our research, your data, your willingness to try new things鈥攊t鈥檚 made it possible for schools like ours to step forward with confidence,鈥 said CAMPP member Shou-Ling Leong, MD, assistant dean for pathways innovation at Penn State College of Medicine, addressing Dr. Cangiarella. 鈥淭ogether, under your leadership, we鈥檝e reimagined what medical education can be.鈥