“…In the UK, this is in part recognised by the system of funding known as the Service Increment Fund for Teaching (SIFT), which provides teaching centres with an additional budget that is estimated to meet these costs [19]. Whether SIFT meets these aims or not is questionable [20], but in Germany, university departments (which deliver student as well as resident education) are funded in broadly three different ways [21, 22]: (a) funding of scientific research via government funding and intramural grants to the university, which encompass scientific training of students and residents, (b) direct funding for student teaching which supports teaching staff salaries and facilities, but which does not meet costs of resident training, (c) clinical care of patients via health insurance company (and government insurance) payments, which are directly related to the DRG code with no additional weighting for resident training. Thus our study has important implications for how German teaching hospitals might (or might not be able to) meet their additional teaching costs for residents (and/or students).…”