Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to discuss the role of rationing in medical education. Medical education is expensive and there is a limit to that which governments, funders or individuals can spend on it. Rationing involves the allocation of resources that are limited. This paper discussed the pros and cons of the application of rationing to medical education and the different forms of rationing that could be applied. Even though some stakeholders in medical education might be taken aback at the prospect of rationing, the truth is that rationing has always occurred in one form or another in medical education and in healthcare more broadly. Different types of rationing exist in healthcare professional education. For example rationing may be implicit or explicit or may be based on macro-allocation or micro-allocation decisions. Funding can be distributed equally among learners, or according to the needs of individual learners, or to ensure that overall usefulness is maximised. One final option is to allow the market to operate freely and to decide in that way. These principles of rationing can apply to individual learners or to institutions or departments or learning modes. Rationing is occurring in medical education, even though it might be implicit. It is worth giving consideration to methods of rationing and to make thinking about rationing more explicit.

Highlights

  • Medical education is expensive.[1]

  • New advances in medical education have likely added to the cost even though there is no question but that these new advances are welcome.[3]

  • There is a limit to that which governments, funders or individuals will spend on medical education

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Summary

Introduction

Medical education is expensive.[1]. It costs hundreds of thousands of pounds to provide undergraduate and postgraduate medical education and to bring an individual school leaver to the level of a consultant specialist.[2]. Different types of rationing exist in healthcare professional education.

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