Revista Española de Educación Médica Vol. 7 Nº 2 (2026)
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Browsing Revista Española de Educación Médica Vol. 7 Nº 2 (2026) by Subject "Applied research"
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- PublicationOpen AccessInvestigar durante la residencia de Radiología: necesidadformativa, responsabilidad profesional y obligacióninstitucional(Universidad de Murcia: servicio de publicaciones, 2026) García-Hidalgo, Clemente; Sin departamento asociadoResearch education during radiology residency is often perceived as a secondary task,separate from clinical practice and perhaps even conflicting with it. This opinion paper challengesthat dichotomy and argues that research is simultaneously an educational requirement for residents,a professional responsibility for radiologists, and an institutional obligation for the department.Drawing on various sources, including data from Spanish-speaking contexts, this article analyzeshow the current system expects research results without providing infrastructure, mentoring, orrecognition, and how the most significant barriers are cultural rather than logistical. The position ofauthors who propose limiting research to residents with “genuine passion” is discussed, recognizingthe partial validity of their premises but rejecting their conclusion: the problem is not that residentsconduct research, but that they do so without structure or supervision. As an alternative, a modelwith three stages is proposed. It is argued that, in the context of a specialty increasingly reliant onartificial intelligence, imaging biomarkers, and precision medicine, training radiologists withresearch skills is not an academic luxury but a requirement for professional sustainability
- PublicationOpen AccessInvestigar durante la residencia de Radiología: necesidadformativa, responsabilidad profesional y obligacióninstitucional(Universidad de Murcia: servicio de publicaciones, 2026) García Hidalgo, Clemente; Sin departamento asociadobstract: Research education during radiology residency is often perceived as a secondary task,separate from clinical practice and perhaps even conflicting with it. This opinion paper challengesthat dichotomy and argues that research is simultaneously an educational requirement for residents,a professional responsibility for radiologists, and an institutional obligation for the department.Drawing on various sources, including data from Spanish-speaking contexts, this article analyzeshow the current system expects research results without providing infrastructure, mentoring, orrecognition, and how the most significant barriers are cultural rather than logistical. The position ofauthors who propose limiting research to residents with “genuine passion” is discussed, recognizingthe partial validity of their premises but rejecting their conclusion: the problem is not that residentsconduct research, but that they do so without structure or supervision. As an alternative, a modelwith three stages is proposed. It is argued that, in the context of a specialty increasingly reliant onartificial intelligence, imaging biomarkers, and precision medicine, training radiologists withresearch skills is not an academic luxury but a requirement for professional sustainability