The objective is to share experiences and tools from a reformed neuroscience curriculum that fosters a positive message about neurology as a career choice.
The design is the neuroscience education model. The University of Toledo College of Medicine and Life Sciences implemented a reformed MD curriculum in 2017. The architecture of the model interweaves the basic and clinical sciences to create a story that goes beyond content delivery but includes faculty reflections, student interest groups in neurology, early clinical experience, and a framework of messaging that defines the hidden curriculum from the practicing neurologist.
Result: Five years into our persistent continuous quality improvement process, we are now seeing an outcome that showed 7.9% of our graduating students (14/176 students) matched in neurology, including child neurology in 2021.
The college has a required 4-week neurology clerkship rotation that has consistently rated the highest in student satisfaction (>90%) compared to all other clinical experiences. In preclinical education, there is a competition for what deserves time in an already busy four-year MD experience. We developed a model that would not only teach the basic tenets of neurologic science but observed interest in neurology spike to a level not previously observed.