The systems for accrediting residency programmes in the United States and Canada, although they have developed independently in the two countries, have similar objectives and accreditation requirements. Both have become increasingly focused over the past several decades on the importance of educational programmes structured to provide graded professional responsibility with appropriate guidance and supervision to residents according to their level of training, ability and experience. The Canadian model used by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada is a centrist one, with accreditation decisions on all programmes in all specialties being vested in a single, multidisciplinary accreditation committee. The American model developed by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education is a distributive one, with accreditation decisions being vested in each specialty Residency Review Committee. In both models, accreditation is based on a system of periodic on-site visits during which both faculty and residents are interviewed by a surveyor to provide the accrediting body with a first-hand evaluation of the extent to which each accredited programme meets the standards of accreditation. While they are similar in purpose, there are significant differences in the operation of the two systems.
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