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246

Canadian Family PhysicianLe Médecin de famille canadien

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Vol 59: march • mars 2013

Letters | Correspondance

Another Canadian in Japan during the bombing

D

r Robbins’ patient was not the only Canadian in Japan when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.1 My husband’s grandfather, Harry Kobayashi, a Canadian businessman of Japanese origin, was living in Tokyo at the time the bombs were dropped. It is a long story; however, the impor- tant point is that as an importer of Japanese small- wares he was caught by the outbreak of war while in Japan on a buying trip. He remained in Japan at the end of the war, having been declared an enemy alien by Canada and having had his prop- erty and business confiscated in his absence. He was one of the longest-surviving Japanese-Canadian World War I veterans. He is commemorated on the Japanese-Canadian war memorial in Stanley Park in Vancouver, BC.

—Jean E. Weir MD CCFP Peterborough, Ont

competing interests None declared reference

1. Neilson S. The faces of family medicine: Peter Robbins MD CCFP FCFP. Can Fam Physician 2013;59:IHC,102-3.

Length of family medicine residency

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s a medical student I found the letter by Dr Buchman endorsing the lengthening of family medicine resi- dency to 3 years deeply troubling.1

I greatly respect those who have gone through the rigours of medical training ahead of my peers and me.

They have the advantage of hindsight to guide their rec- ommendations for future advancements in medical edu- cation. However, I can’t help but think that it is much easier for physicians who are far from their training days to endorse more time before today’s batch of fam- ily physicians can actually practise and make a living.

The average age of my entering class is 26 years.2 Naturally, many of us are older than this. Thirteen of us have masters’ degrees, one has a doctorate, and many of us are entering medicine as a second career.2

While my interest in family medicine is definitely multifactorial, the length of training is an important influence on my postgraduate specialty selection as an older medical student. In fact, it has been demon- strated that older age at admission to medical school has a positive correlation with selecting family med- icine training.3 Family medicine trainees are now older at the time of exiting training (mean age 29.8 years in 1996 vs 31.6 years in 2010 to 2011).4 This continued upward trend makes the careers of recent and future graduates shorter than those of genera- tions ago.

I believe that if family medicine residency is length- ened to 3 years, by the time my class reaches our Canadian Resident Matching Service selection process, many of us who were attracted to the shorter training period of family medicine training might take Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada spe- cialty training instead. As an individual interested in family medicine and emergency medicine Certification, a proposed total of 4 years of training is little incen- tive not to endure an extra fifth year of training in another specialty.

Arguably, a mandatory extra year of training is unnecessary for today’s self-reflective learners who are able to identify areas of weakness and pursue voluntary additional training. This is shown by the considerable increase in students taking optional third-year family medicine training, from 85 in 1996 to 1997, to 242 in 2010 to 2011.4 This suggests that those who feel the need for extra training can self- select such a route while others can enter indepen- dent practices.

While only a beginner, I suspect that much of medi- cine is learned through trial by fire. Experience is gained through independent clinical experience, making mis- takes, self-reflection, and lifelong learning rather than longer training periods with preceptor safety nets. While the opinions of practising physicians—both recent and distant graduates—are important for the future of fam- ily medicine training, please do not forget the voice of medical students who will be greatly affected by lofty decisions such as revising training duration.

—Zsolt Toth MPH RD Sudbury, Ont

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Vol 59: march • mars 2013

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Canadian Family PhysicianLe Médecin de famille canadien

247

Letters | Correspondance

competing interests None declared references

1. Buchman S. It’s about time: 3-year FM residency training. Can Fam Physician 2012;58:1045 (Eng), 1046 (Fr).

2. Northern Ontario School of Medicine [website]. Class profiles. Sudbury, ON:

Northern Ontario School of Medicine; 2012. Available from: www.nosm.ca/

classprofiles/. Accessed 2012 Dec 15.

3. Delmege MG, Hogenbirk JC, Pong RW. Demographic characteristics of NOSM medical students associated with intended medical discipline and prac- tice location. Paper presented at: Fifth Annual Northern Health Research Conference; 2010 Jun 4-5; Sudbury, ON.

4. Pong RW. Post-M.D. training in family medicine in Canada: continuity and change over a 15-year period. Ottawa, ON: Canadian Post-M.D. Education Registry; 2012. Available from: www.caper.ca/~assets/documents/pdf_

PostMD_Training_FamilyMedicine_Report%20_Apr-2012.pdf. Accessed 2013 Feb 7.

Thank you for recognizing Dr Patten

T

hank you for your profile of Dr Don Patten in your November issue.1 I was a resident in family practice at the Ottawa Civic Hospital in the early 1990s, and I am very grateful to Dr Patten for sharing his knowledge and skills in the art and science of medicine with us.

Throughout my career, I have had the privilege of work- ing with many knowledgeable and wise colleagues, and Dr Patten is one of the best. He has been a wonderful example of and advocate for the practice of family medi- cine, and I was very pleased to see him receive a small amount of the recognition that he deserves.

—Heather Langille MD Ottawa, Ont

competing interests None declared reference

1. Neilson S. The faces of family medicine: Don Patten MD CCFP(LM) FCFP. Can Fam Physician 2012;58:IHC,1296-7.

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