Trends in the Supply of Spinal Cord Injury Medicine Physicians in the United States: An Evolving Human Resource Shortfall
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Key points:
1) The incidence and prevalence of spinal cord injury are rising due to an aging population, increased falls with incomplete cervical injuries and the impact of nontraumatic spinal cord injury.
2) With this increased incidence of traumatic and nontraumatic SCI, there is a growing need for Spinal Cord Injury Medicine specialists . This has resulted in increased training positions in the US.
3) However, many training positions in the US go unfilled and there is a growing need for trained SCI Medicine physicians. Proactive steps are needed to address this shortfall.
Host: Dr Michael Fehlings, Editor in Chief of Spinal Cord, Professor of Neurosurgery, Robert Campeau Family Foundation-Dr. CH Tator Chair in Brain and Spinal Cord Research, Vice Chairman Research), Co-Director Spine Program, Department of Surgery, University of Toronto
Speakers
Dr Jason Silvestre is a resident Physician at the Medical University of South Carolina
Dr Robert Ravinsky is a dual-fellowship trained, dual board-certified (Canada & USA) orthopaedic spine surgeon, Department of Orthopaedics and Physical Medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina
The opinions of our host and guests are their own; ISCoS does not endorse any individual viewpoints, given products or companies.
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The SCI Care: What Really Matters podcast aims to provide valuable insights and the most up-to-date information for those providing care to people with spinal cord injury (SCI) worldwide. The vision of the International Spinal Cord Society (ISCoS) is to "facilitate healthy and inclusive lives for people with spinal cord injury or dysfunction globally".
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Chapters
1. Introduction and Paper Overview (00:00:00)
2. Key Findings on Physician Shortfall (00:01:47)
3. Complex Care Needs and Rising Cases (00:04:24)
4. Traumatic vs Non-Traumatic SCI Trends (00:07:48)
5. Improving Medical Education Pipeline (00:10:18)
6. Summary and Final Thoughts (00:15:24)
88 episodes