Monitoring ophthalmology graduate education. The Residency Review Committee
J. D. Trobe, F. Fraunfelder, D. B. Jones, T. P. Kearns, R. S. Kinder, B. Milder, R. Richards, W. H. Spencer and G. W. Weinstein
Formal monitoring of quality control in American graduate medical education
is the task of the residency review committees (RRCs). The RRC for
ophthalmology consists of nine members appointed by the American Board of
Ophthalmology, the American Academy of Ophthalmology, and the American
Medical Association. The RRC meets twice each year to determine the
accreditation status of residency training programs. As of 1978, the
residents ae board eligible only if they have graduated from accredited
programs. The review process is based on data collected in standard
hospital information forms and a site survey. An RRC member evaluates this
information and makes a recommendation that is discussed and voted on by
the nine-member RRC body. In response to pressures for greater quality
control and regulatory visibility, the review process has been bolstered by
improvements in the data-gathering forms and in the surveyors and by a
revision of the minimum requirements for accreditation that provides
clearer and more stringent guidelines.