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Peter Cantillon Department of
General Practice and Primary Care, Guy's, King's and St Thomas's School
of Medicine, King's College, London SE11 6SP
Correspondence to: Dr Cantillon
peter.cantillon@kcl.ac.uk
The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.
Continuing medical education (CME) has undergone enormous changes in recent years in terms of its theoretical base, the methodologies used, and the expectations of what it should deliver. It has become an increasingly important concern for governments and patients as well as doctors. As reaccreditation and quality assurance programmes have become more widespread, the effectiveness of continuing medical education in changing clinical behaviour has come under closer scrutiny.
Davis defines continuing medical education as "any and all the
ways by which doctors learn after formal completion of their training."1 Grant and Stanton distinguish between
continuing medical education and continuing professional
development.2 Continuing medical education is seen as
representing a more teacher based, didactic style whereas continuing
professional development implies a more learner centred and self
directed approach to learning. These terms are used interchangeably in
the literature. For the purposes of this article we will refer to all
postgraduate educational
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