fbpx
Wikipedia

Medical education

Medical education is education related to the practice of being a medical practitioner, including the initial training to become a physician (i.e., medical school and internship) and additional training thereafter (e.g., residency, fellowship, and continuing medical education).

Medical student in a laboratory at Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education, Mexico City.
Medical Student taking blood pressure during awareness campaign event

Medical education and training varies considerably across the world. Various teaching methodologies have been used in medical education, which is an active area of educational research.[1]

Medical education is also the subject-didactic academic field of educating medical doctors at all levels, including entry-level, post-graduate, and continuing medical education. Specific requirements such as entrustable professional activities must be met before moving on in stages of medical education.

Common techniques and evidence base edit

Medical education applies theories of pedagogy specifically in the context of medical education. Medical education has been a leader in the field of evidence-based education, through the development of evidence syntheses such as the Best Evidence Medical Education collection, formed in 1999, which aimed to "move from opinion-based education to evidence-based education".[2] Common evidence-based techniques include the Objective structured clinical examination (commonly known as the 'OSCE) [3] to assess clinical skills, and reliable checklist-based assessments to determine the development of soft skills such as professionalism.[4] However, there is a persistence of ineffective instructional methods in medical education, such as the matching of teaching to learning styles[5] and Edgar Dales' "Cone of Learning".[6]

Entry-level education edit

 
Faculty of Medicine (Comenius University in Bratislava) Slovakia

Entry-level medical education programs are tertiary-level courses undertaken at a medical school. Depending on jurisdiction and university, these may be either undergraduate-entry (most of Europe, Asia, South America and Oceania), or graduate-entry programs (mainly Australia, Philippines and North America). Some jurisdictions and universities provide both undergraduate entry programs and graduate entry programs (Australia, South Korea).

In general, initial training is taken at medical school. Traditionally initial medical education is divided between preclinical and clinical studies. The former consists of the basic sciences such as anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, pharmacology, pathology, microbiology. The latter consists of teaching in the various areas of clinical medicine such as internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, psychiatry, general practice and surgery. More recently, there have been significant efforts in the United States to integrate health systems science (HSS) as the "third pillar" of medical education, alongside preclinical and clinical studies.[7] HSS is a foundational platform and framework for the study and understanding of how care is delivered, how health professionals work together to deliver that care, and how the health system can improve patient care and health care delivery.[8]

There has been a proliferation of programmes that combine medical training with research (M.D./Ph.D.) or management programmes (M.D./ MBA), although this has been criticised because extended interruption to clinical study has been shown to have a detrimental effect on ultimate clinical knowledge.[9]

The LCME and the "Function and Structure of a Medical School" edit

The Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) is a committee of educational accreditation for schools of medicine leading to an MD in the United States and Canada. In order to maintain accreditation, medical schools are required to ensure that students meet a certain set of standards and competencies, defined by the accreditation committees. The "Function and Structure of a Medical School" article is a yearly published article from the LCME that defines 12 accreditation standards.[10]

Entrustable Professional Activities for entering residency edit

The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) has recommended thirteen Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs) that medical students should be expected to accomplish prior to beginning a residency program.[11][12][13] EPAs are based on the integrated core competencies developed over the course of medical school training. Each EPA lists its key feature, associated competencies, and observed behaviors required for completion of that activity. The students progress through levels of understanding and capability, developing with decreasing need for direct supervision.[11][12][13] Eventually students should be able to perform each activity independently, only requiring assistance in situations of unique or uncommon complexity.[11][12][13]

The list of topics that EPAs address include:

  1. History and physical exam skills
  2. Differential diagnosis
  3. Diagnostic/screening tests
  4. Orders and prescriptions
  5. Patient encounter documentation
  6. Oral presentations of patient encounters
  7. Clinical questioning/using evidence
  8. Patient handovers/transitions of care
  9. Teamwork
  10. Urgent/Emergency care
  11. Informed consent
  12. Procedures
  13. Safety and improvement

Postgraduate education edit

 
Dean's office at the First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague

Following completion of entry-level training, newly graduated doctors are often required to undertake a period of supervised practice before full registration is granted; this is most often of one-year duration and may be referred to as an "internship" or "provisional registration" or "residency".

Further training in a particular field of medicine may be undertaken. In the U.S., further specialized training, completed after residency is referred to as "fellowship". In some jurisdictions, this is commenced immediately following completion of entry-level training, while other jurisdictions require junior doctors to undertake generalist (unstreamed) training for a number of years before commencing specialization.

Each residency and fellowship program is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), a non-profit organization led by physicians with the goal of enhancing educational standards among physicians. The ACGME oversees all MD and DO residency programs in the United States. As of 2019, there were approximately 11,700 ACGME accredited residencies and fellowship programs in 181 specialties and subspecialties.[14]

Education theory itself is becoming an integral part of postgraduate medical training. Formal qualifications in education are also becoming the norm for medical educators, such that there has been a rapid increase in the number of available graduate programs in medical education.[15][16]

Continuing medical education edit

In most countries, continuing medical education (CME) courses are required for continued licensing.[17] CME requirements vary by state and by country. In the US, accreditation is overseen by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME). Physicians often attend dedicated lectures, grand rounds, conferences, and performance improvement activities in order to fulfill their requirements. Additionally, physicians are increasingly opting to pursue further graduate-level training in the formal study of medical education as a pathway for continuing professional development.[18][19]

Online learning edit

Medical education is increasingly utilizing online teaching, usually within learning management systems (LMSs) or virtual learning environments (VLEs).[20][21] Additionally, several medical schools have incorporated the use of blended learning combining the use of video, asynchronous, and in-person exercises.[22][23] A landmark scoping review published in 2018 demonstrated that online teaching modalities are becoming increasingly prevalent in medical education, with associated high student satisfaction and improvement on knowledge tests. However, the use of evidence-based multimedia design principles in the development of online lectures was seldom reported, despite their known effectiveness in medical student contexts.[24] To enhance variety in an online delivery environment, the use of serious games, which have previously shown benefit in medical education,[25] can be incorporated to break the monotony of online-delivered lectures.[26]

Research areas into online medical education include practical applications, including simulated patients and virtual medical records (see also: telehealth).[27] When compared to no intervention, simulation in medical education training is associated with positive effects on knowledge, skills, and behaviors and moderate effects for patient outcomes.[28] However, data is inconsistent on the effectiveness of asynchronous online learning when compared to traditional in-person lectures.[29][30] Furthermore, studies utilizing modern visualization technology (i.e. virtual and augmented reality) have shown great promise as means to supplement lesson content in physiological and anatomical education.[31][32]

Telemedicine/telehealth education edit

With the advent of telemedicine (aka telehealth), students learn to interact with and treat patients online, an increasingly important skill in medical education.[33][34][35][36] In training, students and clinicians enter a "virtual patient room" in which they interact and share information with a simulated or real patient actors. Students are assessed based on professionalism, communication, medical history gathering, physical exam, and ability to make shared decisions with the patient actor.[37][38]

Medical education systems by country edit

 
Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, the primary teaching hospital for the Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami, July 2010

At present, in the United Kingdom, a typical medicine course at university is five years, or four years if the student already holds a degree. Among some institutions and for some students, it may be six years (including the selection of an intercalated BSc—taking one year—at some point after the pre-clinical studies). All programs culminate in the Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery degree (abbreviated MBChB, MBBS, MBBCh, BM, etc.). This is followed by two clinical foundation years afterward, namely F1 and F2, similar to internship training. Students register with the UK General Medical Council at the end of F1. At the end of F2, they may pursue further years of study. The system in Australia is very similar, with registration by the Australian Medical Council (AMC).

In the US and Canada, a potential medical student must first complete an undergraduate degree in any subject before applying to a graduate medical school to pursue an (M.D. or D.O.) program. U.S. medical schools are almost all four-year programs. Some students opt for the research-focused M.D./Ph.D. dual degree program, which is usually completed in 7–10 years. There are certain courses that are pre-requisite for being accepted to medical school, such as general chemistry, organic chemistry, physics, mathematics, biology, English, labwork, etc. The specific requirements vary by school.

In Australia, there are two pathways to a medical degree. Students can choose to take a five- or six-year undergraduate medical degree Bachelor of Medicine/Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS or BMed) as a first tertiary degree directly after secondary school graduation, or first complete a bachelor's degree (in general three years, usually in the medical sciences) and then apply for a four-year graduate entry Bachelor of Medicine/Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) program.[39][40]

See:

North America
Europe
Asia/Middle East/Oceania
Africa

Norms and values edit

Along with training individuals in the practice of medicine, medical education influences the norms and values of its participants (patients, families, etc.) This either occurs through explicit training in medical ethics, or covertly through a "hidden curriculum" –– a body of norms and values that students encounter implicitly, but is not formally taught.[41][42][43] While formal ethics courses are a requirement at schools such as those accredited by the LCME, gaps between these courses and the "hidden curriculum" throughout medical education are frequently raised as issues contributing to the culture of medicine.[44][45][46][47]

The aims of medical ethics training are to give medical doctors the ability to recognise ethical issues, reason about them morally and legally when making clinical decisions, and be able to interact to obtain the information necessary to do so.[48]

The hidden curriculum may include the use of unprofessional behaviours for efficiency[a] or viewing the academic hierarchy as more important than the patient.[b] In certain institutions, such as those with LCME accreditation, the requirement of "professionalism" may be additionally weaponized against trainees, with complaints about ethics and safety being labelled as unprofessional.[50][51][52][53]

The hidden curriculum was recently shown to be a cause of reduction in medical student empathy as they progress throughout medical school.[54]

Integration with health policy edit

As medical professional stakeholders in the field of health care (i.e. entities integrally involved in the health care system and affected by reform), the practice of medicine (i.e. diagnosing, treating, and monitoring disease) is directly affected by the ongoing changes in both national and local health policy and economics.[55]

There is a growing call for health professional training programs to not only adopt more rigorous health policy education and leadership training,[56][57][58] but to apply a broader lens to the concept of teaching and implementing health policy through health equity and social disparities that largely affect health and patient outcomes.[59][60] Increased mortality and morbidity rates occur from birth to age 75, attributed to medical care (insurance access, quality of care), individual behavior (smoking, diet, exercise, drugs, risky behavior), socioeconomic and demographic factors (poverty, inequality, racial disparities, segregation), and physical environment (housing, education, transportation, urban planning).[60] A country's health care delivery system reflects its "underlying values, tolerances, expectations, and cultures of the societies they serve",[61] and medical professionals stand in a unique position to influence opinion and policy of patients, healthcare administrators, & lawmakers.[56][62]

In order to truly integrate health policy matters into physician and medical education, training should begin as early as possible – ideally during medical school or premedical coursework – to build "foundational knowledge and analytical skills" continued during residency and reinforced throughout clinical practice, like any other core skill or competency.[58] This source further recommends adopting a national standardized core health policy curriculum for medical schools and residencies in order to introduce a core foundation in this much needed area, focusing on four main domains of health care: (1) systems and principles (e.g. financing; payment; models of management; information technology; physician workforce), (2) quality and safety (e.g. quality improvement indicators, measures, and outcomes; patient safety), (3) value and equity (e.g. medical economics, medical decision making, comparative effectiveness, health disparities), and (4) politics and law (e.g. history and consequences of major legislations; adverse events, medical errors, and malpractice).

However limitations to implementing these health policy courses mainly include perceived time constraints from scheduling conflicts, the need for an interdisciplinary faculty team, and lack of research / funding to determine what curriculum design may best suit the program goals.[58][59] Resistance in one pilot program was seen from program directors who did not see the relevance of the elective course and who were bounded by program training requirements limited by scheduling conflicts and inadequate time for non-clinical activities.[63] But for students in one medical school study,[64] those taught higher-intensity curriculum (vs lower-intensity) were "three to four times as likely to perceive themselves as appropriately trained in components of health care systems", and felt it did not take away from getting poorer training in other areas. Additionally, recruiting and retaining a diverse set of multidisciplinary instructors and policy or economic experts with sufficient knowledge and training may be limited at community-based programs or schools without health policy or public health departments or graduate programs. Remedies may include having online courses, off-site trips to the capitol or health foundations, or dedicated externships, but these have interactive, cost, and time constraints as well. Despite these limitations, several programs in both medical school and residency training have been pioneered.[59][63][65][66][67]

Lastly, more national support and research will be needed to not only establish these programs but to evaluate how to both standardize and innovate the curriculum in a way that is flexible with the changing health care and policy landscape. In the United States, this will involve coordination with the ACGME (Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education), a private NPO that sets educational and training standards[68] for U.S. residencies and fellowships that determines funding and ability to operate.

Medical education as a subject-didactic field edit

Medical education is also the subject-didactic field of educating medical doctors at all levels, applying theories of pedagogy in the medical context, with its own journals, such as Medical Education. Researchers and practitioners in this field are usually medical doctors or educationalists. Medical curricula vary between medical schools, and are constantly evolving in response to the need of medical students, as well as the resources available.[69] Medical schools have been documented to utilize various forms of problem-based learning, team-based learning, and simulation.[70][71][72][73] The Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) publishes standard guidelines regarding goals of medical education, including curriculum design, implementation, and evaluation.[10]

 
Air National Guard Base training in medical simulation

The objective structured clinical examinations (OSCEs) are widely utilized as a way to assess health science students' clinical abilities in a controlled setting.[74][75] Although used in medical education programs throughout the world, the methodology for assessment may vary between programs and thus attempts to standardize the assessment have been made.[76][77]

Cadaver laboratory edit

 
Medical student describes anatomical landmarks of a donated human cadaver.

Medical schools and surgical residency programs may utilize cadavers to identify anatomy, study pathology, perform procedures, correlate radiology findings, and identify causes of death.[78][79][80][81][82] With the integration of technology, traditional cadaver dissection has been debated regarding its effectiveness in medical education, but remains a large component of medical curriculum around the world.[78][82] Didactic courses in cadaver dissection are commonly offered by certified anatomists, scientists, and physicians with a background in the subject.[78]

Medical curriculum and evidence-based medical education journals edit

Medical curriculum vary widely among medical schools and residency programs, but generally follow an evidence based medical education (EBME) approach.[83] These evidence based approaches are published in medical journals. The list of peer-reviewed medical education journals includes, but is not limited to:

Open access medical education journals:

Graduate Medical Education and Continuing Medical Education focused journals:

  • Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions
  • Journal of Graduate Medical Education

This is not a complete list of medical education journals. Each medical journal in this list has a varying impact factor, or mean number of citations indicating how often it is used in scientific research and study.

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ "As in any crisis, the environment has evolved to accept substandard professional behavior in exchange for efficiency or productivity" [49]
  2. ^ "In Coulehan's view, the hidden curriculum places the academic hierarchy—not the patient—at the center of medical education."[49]

References edit

  1. ^ Flores-Mateo G, Argimon JM (July 2007). "Evidence based practice in postgraduate healthcare education: a systematic review". BMC Health Services Research. 7: 119. doi:10.1186/1472-6963-7-119. PMC 1995214. PMID 17655743.
  2. ^ Harden RM, Grant J, Buckley G, Hart IR (1999-01-01). "BEME Guide No. 1: Best Evidence Medical Education". Medical Teacher. 21 (6): 553–62. doi:10.1080/01421599978960. PMID 21281174. S2CID 7233599.
  3. ^ Daniels VJ, Pugh D (December 2018). "Twelve tips for developing an OSCE that measures what you want". Medical Teacher. 40 (12): 1208–1213. doi:10.1080/0142159X.2017.1390214. PMID 29069965. S2CID 44971925.
  4. ^ Wilkinson TJ, Wade WB, Knock LD (May 2009). "A blueprint to assess professionalism: results of a systematic review". Academic Medicine. 84 (5): 551–8. doi:10.1097/ACM.0b013e31819fbaa2. PMID 19704185. S2CID 44915975.
  5. ^ Newton PM, Najabat-Lattif HF, Santiago G, Salvi A (2021). "The Learning Styles Neuromyth Is Still Thriving in Medical Education". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 15: 708540. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2021.708540. PMC 8385406. PMID 34456698.
  6. ^ Masters K (January 2020). "Edgar Dale's Pyramid of Learning in medical education: Further expansion of the myth". Medical Education. 54 (1): 22–32. doi:10.1111/medu.13813. PMID 31576610. S2CID 203640807.
  7. ^ Fred, Herbert L.; Gonzalo, Jed D. (2018-06-01). "Reframing Medical Education". Texas Heart Institute Journal. 45 (3): 123–125. doi:10.14503/THIJ-18-6729. ISSN 0730-2347. PMC 6059511. PMID 30072846.
  8. ^ "Health Systems Science - 9780323694629". US Elsevier Health. Retrieved 2024-05-13.
  9. ^ Dyrbye LN, Thomas MR, Natt N, Rohren CH (August 2007). "Prolonged delays for research training in medical school are associated with poorer subsequent clinical knowledge". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 22 (8): 1101–6. doi:10.1007/s11606-007-0200-x. PMC 2305740. PMID 17492473.
  10. ^ a b "Standards, Publications, & Notification Forms". LCME. March 31, 2020. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
  11. ^ a b c Obeso V (2017). "Core Entrustable Professional Activities for Entering Residency" (PDF). Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  12. ^ a b c Ten Cate O (March 2013). "Nuts and bolts of entrustable professional activities". Journal of Graduate Medical Education. 5 (1): 157–8. doi:10.4300/JGME-D-12-00380.1. PMC 3613304. PMID 24404246.
  13. ^ a b c Cate OT (March 2018). "A primer on entrustable professional activities". Korean Journal of Medical Education. 30 (1): 1–10. doi:10.3946/kjme.2018.76. PMC 5840559. PMID 29510603.
  14. ^ Data Resource Book. Vol. 19. Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. 2019. pp. 13–19.
  15. ^ Tekian A, Artino AR (September 2013). "AM last page: master's degree in health professions education programs". Academic Medicine. 88 (9): 1399. doi:10.1097/ACM.0b013e31829decf6. PMID 23982511.
  16. ^ Tekian A, Artino AR (September 2014). "AM last page. Overview of doctoral programs in health professions education". Academic Medicine. 89 (9): 1309. doi:10.1097/ACM.0000000000000421. PMID 25006714.
  17. ^ Ahmed K, Ashrafian H, Hanna GB, Darzi A, Athanasiou T (October 2009). "Assessment of specialists in cardiovascular practice". Nature Reviews. Cardiology. 6 (10): 659–67. doi:10.1038/nrcardio.2009.155. PMID 19724254. S2CID 21452983.
  18. ^ Cervero RM, Artino AR, Daley BJ, Durning SJ (2017). "Health Professions Education Graduate Programs Are a Pathway to Strengthening Continuing Professional Development". The Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions. 37 (2): 147–151. doi:10.1097/CEH.0000000000000155. PMID 28562504. S2CID 13954832.
  19. ^ Artino AR, Cervero RM, DeZee KJ, Holmboe E, Durning SJ (April 2018). "Graduate Programs in Health Professions Education: Preparing Academic Leaders for Future Challenges". Journal of Graduate Medical Education. 10 (2): 119–122. doi:10.4300/JGME-D-18-00082.1. PMC 5901787. PMID 29686748.
  20. ^ Ellaway R, Masters K (June 2008). "AMEE Guide 32: e-Learning in medical education Part 1: Learning, teaching and assessment". Medical Teacher. 30 (5): 455–73. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.475.1660. doi:10.1080/01421590802108331. PMID 18576185. S2CID 13793264.
  21. ^ Masters K, Ellaway R (June 2008). "e-Learning in medical education Guide 32 Part 2: Technology, management and design". Medical Teacher. 30 (5): 474–89. doi:10.1080/01421590802108349. PMID 18576186. S2CID 43473920.
  22. ^ Evans KH, Thompson AC, O'Brien C, Bryant M, Basaviah P, Prober C, Popat RA (May 2016). "An Innovative Blended Preclinical Curriculum in Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics: Impact on Student Satisfaction and Performance". Academic Medicine. 91 (5): 696–700. doi:10.1097/ACM.0000000000001085. PMID 26796089.
  23. ^ Villatoro T, Lackritz K, Chan JS (2019-01-01). "Case-Based Asynchronous Interactive Modules in Undergraduate Medical Education". Academic Pathology. 6: 2374289519884715. doi:10.1177/2374289519884715. PMC 6823976. PMID 31700991.
  24. ^ Tang B, Coret A, Qureshi A, Barron H, Ayala AP, Law M (April 2018). "Online Lectures in Undergraduate Medical Education: Scoping Review". JMIR Medical Education. 4 (1): e11. doi:10.2196/mededu.9091. PMC 5915670. PMID 29636322.
  25. ^ Birt J, Stromberga Z, Cowling M, Moro C (2018-01-31). "Mobile Mixed Reality for Experiential Learning and Simulation in Medical and Health Sciences Education". Information. 9 (2): 31. doi:10.3390/info9020031. ISSN 2078-2489.
  26. ^ Moro C, Stromberga Z (December 2020). "Enhancing variety through gamified, interactive learning experiences". Medical Education. 54 (12): 1180–1181. doi:10.1111/medu.14251. PMID 32438478.
  27. ^ Favreau A. . Regents of the University of Minnesota. Archived from the original on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2011-09-13.
  28. ^ Cook DA, Hatala R, Brydges R, Zendejas B, Szostek JH, Wang AT, et al. (September 2011). "Technology-enhanced simulation for health professions education: a systematic review and meta-analysis". JAMA. 306 (9): 978–88. doi:10.1001/jama.2011.1234. PMID 21900138.
  29. ^ Jordan J, Jalali A, Clarke S, Dyne P, Spector T, Coates W (August 2013). "Asynchronous vs didactic education: it's too early to throw in the towel on tradition". BMC Medical Education. 13 (1): 105. doi:10.1186/1472-6920-13-105. PMC 3750828. PMID 23927420.
  30. ^ Wray A, Bennett K, Boysen-Osborn M, Wiechmann W, Toohey S (2017-12-11). "Efficacy of an asynchronous electronic curriculum in emergency medicine education in the United States". Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions. 14: 29. doi:10.3352/jeehp.2017.14.29. PMC 5801323. PMID 29237247.
  31. ^ Moro C, Štromberga Z, Raikos A, Stirling A (November 2017). "The effectiveness of virtual and augmented reality in health sciences and medical anatomy". Anatomical Sciences Education. 10 (6): 549–559. doi:10.1002/ase.1696. PMID 28419750. S2CID 25961448.
  32. ^ Moro C, Štromberga Z, Stirling A (2017-11-29). "Virtualisation devices for student learning: Comparison between desktop-based (Oculus Rift) and mobile-based (Gear VR) virtual reality in medical and health science education". Australasian Journal of Educational Technology. 33 (6). doi:10.14742/ajet.3840. ISSN 1449-5554.
  33. ^ Kononowicz AA, Woodham LA, Edelbring S, Stathakarou N, Davies D, Saxena N, et al. (July 2019). "Virtual Patient Simulations in Health Professions Education: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis by the Digital Health Education Collaboration". Journal of Medical Internet Research. 21 (7): e14676. doi:10.2196/14676. PMC 6632099. PMID 31267981.
  34. ^ Kovacevic P, Dragic S, Kovacevic T, Momcicevic D, Festic E, Kashyap R, et al. (June 2019). "Impact of weekly case-based tele-education on quality of care in a limited resource medical intensive care unit". Critical Care. 23 (1): 220. doi:10.1186/s13054-019-2494-6. PMC 6567671. PMID 31200761.
  35. ^ van Houwelingen CT, Moerman AH, Ettema RG, Kort HS, Ten Cate O (April 2016). "Competencies required for nursing telehealth activities: A Delphi-study". Nurse Education Today. 39: 50–62. doi:10.1016/j.nedt.2015.12.025. PMID 27006033.
  36. ^ "Editorial". Indigenous Law Bulletin. 7 (16). January–February 2010. doi:10.1163/2210-7975_hrd-1758-0046.
  37. ^ Cantone RE, Palmer R, Dodson LG, Biagioli FE (December 2019). "Insomnia Telemedicine OSCE (TeleOSCE): A Simulated Standardized Patient Video-Visit Case for Clerkship Students". MedEdPORTAL. 15 (1): 10867. doi:10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10867. PMC 7012306. PMID 32051850.
  38. ^ Shortridge A, Steinheider B, Ciro C, Randall K, Costner-Lark A, Loving G (June 2016). "Simulating Interprofessional Geriatric Patient Care Using Telehealth: A Team-Based Learning Activity". MedEdPORTAL. 12 (1): 10415. doi:10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10415. PMC 6464453. PMID 31008195.
  39. ^ "Medicine - Find My Pathway". Find My Pathway. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  40. ^ "Pathways through specialty medical training". Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (RACS). Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  41. ^ "Navigating the hidden curriculum in medical school". AAMC. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  42. ^ Sarikhani Y, Shojaei P, Rafiee M, Delavari S (June 2020). "Analyzing the interaction of main components of hidden curriculum in medical education using interpretive structural modeling method". BMC Medical Education. 20 (1): 176. doi:10.1186/s12909-020-02094-5. PMC 7269001. PMID 32487128.
  43. ^ Lempp H, Seale C (October 2004). "The hidden curriculum in undergraduate medical education: qualitative study of medical students' perceptions of teaching". BMJ. 329 (7469): 770–773. doi:10.1136/bmj.329.7469.770. PMC 520997. PMID 15459051.
  44. ^ Hafler JP, Ownby AR, Thompson BM, Fasser CE, Grigsby K, Haidet P, et al. (April 2011). "Decoding the learning environment of medical education: a hidden curriculum perspective for faculty development". Academic Medicine. 86 (4): 440–444. doi:10.1097/ACM.0b013e31820df8e2. PMID 21346498.
  45. ^ Shelton W, Campo-Engelstein L (2022). "Confronting the Hidden Curriculum: A Four-Year Integrated Course in Ethics and Professionalism Grounded in Virtue Ethics". In Jones T, Pachucki K (eds.). The Medical/Health Humanities-Politics, Programs, and Pedagogies. Cham: Springer International Publishing. pp. 177–191. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-19227-2_12. ISBN 978-3-031-19227-2.
  46. ^ Azmand S, Ebrahimi S, Iman M, Asemani O (2018). "Learning professionalism through hidden curriculum: Iranian medical students' perspective". Journal of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine. 11: 10. PMC 6642446. PMID 31346387.
  47. ^ Safari Y, Khatony A, Khodamoradi E, Rezaei M (2020). "The role of hidden curriculum in the formation of professional ethics in Iranian medical students: A qualitative study". Journal of Education and Health Promotion. 9: 180. doi:10.4103/jehp.jehp_172_20. PMC 7482700. PMID 32953908.
  48. ^ "Standards, Publications, & Notification Forms". LCME. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  49. ^ a b Brainard AH, Brislen HC (November 2007). "Viewpoint: learning professionalism: a view from the trenches". Academic Medicine. 82 (11). Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health): 1010–1014. doi:10.1097/01.acm.0000285343.95826.94. PMID 17971682.
  50. ^ DeLoughery EP (May 2018). "Professionalism Framings Across Medical Schools". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 33 (5): 610–611. doi:10.1007/s11606-018-4314-0. PMC 5910349. PMID 29435728.
  51. ^ Corcimaru A, Morrell MC, Morrell DS (April 2018). "Do looks matter? The role of the Electronic Residency Application Service photograph in dermatology residency selection". Dermatology Online Journal. 24 (4): 13030/qt5qc988jz. doi:10.5070/D3244039354. PMID 29906000.
  52. ^ Ross DA, Boatright D, Nunez-Smith M, Jordan A, Chekroud A, Moore EZ (2017). "Differences in words used to describe racial and gender groups in Medical Student Performance Evaluations". PLOS ONE. 12 (8): e0181659. Bibcode:2017PLoSO..1281659R. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0181659. PMC 5549898. PMID 28792940.
  53. ^ Cerdeña JP, Asabor EN, Rendell S, Okolo T, Lett E (2022). "Resculpting Professionalism for Equity and Accountability". Annals of Family Medicine. 20 (6): 573–577. doi:10.1370/afm.2892. PMC 9705046. PMID 36443090.
  54. ^ Howick J, Dudko M, Feng SN, Ahmed A, Alluri N, Nockels K, Winter R, Holland R (April 2023). "Why might medical student empathy change throughout medical school? a systematic review and thematic synthesis of qualitative studies". BMC Medical Education. 23 (270): 270. doi:10.1186/s12909-023-04165-9. PMC 10124056. PMID 37088814.
  55. ^ Steinberg ML (July 2008). "Introduction: health policy and health care economics observed". Seminars in Radiation Oncology. 18 (3): 149–51. doi:10.1016/j.semradonc.2008.01.001. PMID 18513623.
  56. ^ a b Schwartz RW, Pogge C (September 2000). "Physician leadership: essential skills in a changing environment". American Journal of Surgery. 180 (3): 187–92. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.579.8091. doi:10.1016/s0002-9610(00)00481-5. PMID 11084127.
  57. ^ Gee RE, Lockwood CJ (January 2013). "Medical education and health policy: what is important for me to know, how do I learn it, and what are the gaps?". Obstetrics and Gynecology. 121 (1): 9–13. doi:10.1097/AOG.0b013e31827a099d. PMID 23262923. S2CID 35826385.
  58. ^ a b c Patel MS, Davis MM, Lypson ML (February 2011). "Advancing medical education by teaching health policy". The New England Journal of Medicine. 364 (8): 695–7. doi:10.1056/NEJMp1009202. PMID 21345098.
  59. ^ a b c Heiman HJ, Smith LL, McKool M, Mitchell DN, Roth Bayer C (December 2015). "Health Policy Training: A Review of the Literature". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 13 (1): ijerph13010020. doi:10.3390/ijerph13010020. PMC 4730411. PMID 26703657.
  60. ^ a b Avendano M, Kawachi I (2014-01-01). "Why do Americans have shorter life expectancy and worse health than do people in other high-income countries?". Annual Review of Public Health. 35: 307–25. doi:10.1146/annurev-publhealth-032013-182411. PMC 4112220. PMID 24422560.
  61. ^ Williams TR (July 2008). "A cultural and global perspective of United States health care economics". Seminars in Radiation Oncology. 18 (3): 175–85. doi:10.1016/j.semradonc.2008.01.005. PMID 18513627.
  62. ^ Beyer DC, Mohideen N (July 2008). "The role of physicians and medical organizations in the development, analysis, and implementation of health care policy". Seminars in Radiation Oncology. 18 (3): 186–93. doi:10.1016/j.semradonc.2008.01.006. PMID 18513628.
  63. ^ a b Greysen SR, Wassermann T, Payne P, Mullan F (December 2009). "Teaching health policy to residents--three-year experience with a multi-specialty curriculum". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 24 (12): 1322–6. doi:10.1007/s11606-009-1143-1. PMC 2787946. PMID 19862580.
  64. ^ Patel MS, Lypson ML, Davis MM (September 2009). "Medical student perceptions of education in health care systems". Academic Medicine. 84 (9): 1301–6. doi:10.1097/acm.0b013e3181b17e3e. PMID 19707077.
  65. ^ Catalanotti J, Popiel D, Johansson P, Talib Z (December 2013). "A pilot curriculum to integrate community health into internal medicine residency training". Journal of Graduate Medical Education. 5 (4): 674–7. doi:10.4300/jgme-d-12-00354.1. PMC 3886472. PMID 24455022.
  66. ^ Rovner J (June 9, 2016). "This Med School Teaches Health Policy Along With The Pills". NPR. Retrieved December 13, 2016 – via Kaiser Health News.
  67. ^ Shah SH, Clark MD, Hu K, Shoener JA, Fogel J, Kling WC, Ronayne J (October 2017). "Systems-Based Training in Graduate Medical Education for Service Learning in the State Legislature in the United States: Pilot Study". JMIR Medical Education. 3 (2): e18. doi:10.2196/mededu.7730. PMC 5663953. PMID 29042343.
  68. ^ "ACGME Core Competencies". The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. The Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates. July 5, 2012. from the original on July 28, 2012. Retrieved December 13, 2016.
  69. ^ Thomas P (2016). Curriculum Development for Medical Education-A Six Step Approach. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-1421418520.
  70. ^ Yew EH, Goh K (2016-12-01). "Problem-Based Learning: An Overview of its Process and Impact on Learning". Health Professions Education. 2 (2): 75–79. doi:10.1016/j.hpe.2016.01.004.
  71. ^ Burgess A, Haq I, Bleasel J, Roberts C, Garsia R, Randal N, Mellis C (October 2019). "Team-based learning (TBL): a community of practice". BMC Medical Education. 19 (1): 369. doi:10.1186/s12909-019-1795-4. PMC 6792232. PMID 31615507.
  72. ^ Scalese RJ, Obeso VT, Issenberg SB (January 2008). "Simulation technology for skills training and competency assessment in medical education". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 23 (1): 46–9. doi:10.1007/s11606-007-0283-4. PMC 2150630. PMID 18095044.
  73. ^ Kilkie S, Harris P (2019-11-01). "P25 Using simulation to assess the effectiveness of undergraduate education". BMJ Simulation and Technology Enhanced Learning. 5 (Suppl 2). doi:10.1136/bmjstel-2019-aspihconf.130 (inactive 2024-05-13).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of May 2024 (link)
  74. ^ Majumder MA, Kumar A, Krishnamurthy K, Ojeh N, Adams OP, Sa B (2019-06-05). "An evaluative study of objective structured clinical examination (OSCE): students and examiners perspectives". Advances in Medical Education and Practice. 10: 387–397. doi:10.2147/amep.s197275. PMC 6556562. PMID 31239801.
  75. ^ Onwudiegwu U (2018). "Osce: Design, Development and Deployment". Journal of the West African College of Surgeons. 8 (1): 1–22. PMC 6398515. PMID 30899701.
  76. ^ Cömert M, Zill JM, Christalle E, Dirmaier J, Härter M, Scholl I (2016-03-31). Hills RK (ed.). "Assessing Communication Skills of Medical Students in Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCE)--A Systematic Review of Rating Scales". PLOS ONE. 11 (3): e0152717. Bibcode:2016PLoSO..1152717C. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0152717. PMC 4816391. PMID 27031506.
  77. ^ Yazbeck Karam V, Park YS, Tekian A, Youssef N (December 2018). "Evaluating the validity evidence of an OSCE: results from a new medical school". BMC Medical Education. 18 (1): 313. doi:10.1186/s12909-018-1421-x. PMC 6302424. PMID 30572876.
  78. ^ a b c Memon I (2018). "Cadaver Dissection Is Obsolete in Medical Training! A Misinterpreted Notion". Medical Principles and Practice. 27 (3): 201–210. doi:10.1159/000488320. PMC 6062726. PMID 29529601.
  79. ^ Tabas JA, Rosenson J, Price DD, Rohde D, Baird CH, Dhillon N (August 2005). "A comprehensive, unembalmed cadaver-based course in advanced emergency procedures for medical students". Academic Emergency Medicine. 12 (8): 782–5. doi:10.1197/j.aem.2005.04.004. PMID 16079434.
  80. ^ Pais D, Casal D, Mascarenhas-Lemos L, Barata P, Moxham BJ, Goyri-O'Neill J (March 2017). "Outcomes and satisfaction of two optional cadaveric dissection courses: A 3-year prospective study" (PDF). Anatomical Sciences Education. 10 (2): 127–136. doi:10.1002/ase.1638. hdl:10400.17/3529. PMID 27483443. S2CID 24795098.
  81. ^ Tavares MA, Dinis-Machado J, Silva MC (1 May 2000). "Computer-based sessions in radiological anatomy: one year's experience in clinical anatomy". Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy. 22 (1): 29–34. doi:10.1007/s00276-000-0029-z. PMID 10863744. S2CID 24564960.
  82. ^ a b Korf HW, Wicht H, Snipes RL, Timmermans JP, Paulsen F, Rune G, Baumgart-Vogt E (1 February 2008). "The dissection course - necessary and indispensable for teaching anatomy to medical students". Annals of Anatomy - Anatomischer Anzeiger. 190 (1): 16–22. doi:10.1016/j.aanat.2007.10.001. PMID 18342138.
  83. ^ Harden RM, Grant J, Buckley G, Hart IR (1 January 1999). "BEME Guide No. 1: Best Evidence Medical Education". Medical Teacher. 21 (6): 553–62. doi:10.1080/01421599978960. PMID 21281174. S2CID 7233599.
  84. ^ (PDF). Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). 2009. pp. 2–4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-08-03. Retrieved 2020-04-30.

Further reading edit

  • Bonner TN (2000). Becoming a physician: medical education in Britain, France, Germany, and the United States, 1750-1945. JHU Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-6482-7.
  • Dunn MB, Jones C (March 2010). "Institutional logics and institutional pluralism: The contestation of care and science logics in medical education, 1967–2005". Administrative Science Quarterly. 55 (1): 114–49. doi:10.2189/asqu.2010.55.1.114. hdl:2152/29317. S2CID 38016621.
  • Gevitz N (2019). The DOs: osteopathic medicine in America. JHU Press. ISBN 978-1-4214-2962-5.
  • Holloway SW (1964). "Medical education in England, 1830–1858: A sociological analysis". History. 49 (167): 299–324. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1964.tb01104.x. JSTOR 24404427.
  • Ludmerer KM (1999). Time to heal: American medical education from the turn of the century to the era of managed care. Oxford Oxford University Press, Inc. ISBN 978-0-19-535341-9.
  • Papa FJ, Harasym PH (1999). "Medical curriculum reform in North America, 1765 to the present: a cognitive science perspective" (PDF). Academic Medicine. 74 (2). Philadelphia: 154–164. doi:10.1097/00001888-199902000-00015. PMID 10065057.[dead link]
  • Parry N, Parry J (1976). The rise of the medical profession: a study of collective social mobility. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780429400926. ISBN 978-0-429-40092-6. S2CID 76248773.
  • Porter R (1995). Disease, medicine and society in England, 1550–1860. Cambridge Oxford University Press, Inc. ISBN 978-0-521-55791-7.
  • Rothstein WG (1987). American medical schools and the practice of medicine: A history. Oxford University Press, Inc. ISBN 978-0-19-536471-2.

External links edit

  • Official website of the Academy of Medical Educators

medical, education, academic, medicine, redirects, here, journal, academic, medicine, journal, education, related, practice, being, medical, practitioner, including, initial, training, become, physician, medical, school, internship, additional, training, there. Academic Medicine redirects here For the journal see Academic Medicine journal Medical education is education related to the practice of being a medical practitioner including the initial training to become a physician i e medical school and internship and additional training thereafter e g residency fellowship and continuing medical education Medical student in a laboratory at Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education Mexico City Medical Student taking blood pressure during awareness campaign event Medical education and training varies considerably across the world Various teaching methodologies have been used in medical education which is an active area of educational research 1 Medical education is also the subject didactic academic field of educating medical doctors at all levels including entry level post graduate and continuing medical education Specific requirements such as entrustable professional activities must be met before moving on in stages of medical education Contents 1 Common techniques and evidence base 2 Entry level education 2 1 The LCME and the Function and Structure of a Medical School 2 2 Entrustable Professional Activities for entering residency 3 Postgraduate education 4 Continuing medical education 5 Online learning 5 1 Telemedicine telehealth education 6 Medical education systems by country 7 Norms and values 8 Integration with health policy 8 1 Medical education as a subject didactic field 8 2 Cadaver laboratory 8 3 Medical curriculum and evidence based medical education journals 9 See also 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksCommon techniques and evidence base editMedical education applies theories of pedagogy specifically in the context of medical education Medical education has been a leader in the field of evidence based education through the development of evidence syntheses such as the Best Evidence Medical Education collection formed in 1999 which aimed to move from opinion based education to evidence based education 2 Common evidence based techniques include the Objective structured clinical examination commonly known as the OSCE 3 to assess clinical skills and reliable checklist based assessments to determine the development of soft skills such as professionalism 4 However there is a persistence of ineffective instructional methods in medical education such as the matching of teaching to learning styles 5 and Edgar Dales Cone of Learning 6 Entry level education editMain article Medical school nbsp Faculty of Medicine Comenius University in Bratislava Slovakia Entry level medical education programs are tertiary level courses undertaken at a medical school Depending on jurisdiction and university these may be either undergraduate entry most of Europe Asia South America and Oceania or graduate entry programs mainly Australia Philippines and North America Some jurisdictions and universities provide both undergraduate entry programs and graduate entry programs Australia South Korea In general initial training is taken at medical school Traditionally initial medical education is divided between preclinical and clinical studies The former consists of the basic sciences such as anatomy physiology biochemistry pharmacology pathology microbiology The latter consists of teaching in the various areas of clinical medicine such as internal medicine pediatrics obstetrics and gynecology psychiatry general practice and surgery More recently there have been significant efforts in the United States to integrate health systems science HSS as the third pillar of medical education alongside preclinical and clinical studies 7 HSS is a foundational platform and framework for the study and understanding of how care is delivered how health professionals work together to deliver that care and how the health system can improve patient care and health care delivery 8 There has been a proliferation of programmes that combine medical training with research M D Ph D or management programmes M D MBA although this has been criticised because extended interruption to clinical study has been shown to have a detrimental effect on ultimate clinical knowledge 9 The LCME and the Function and Structure of a Medical School edit The Liaison Committee on Medical Education LCME is a committee of educational accreditation for schools of medicine leading to an MD in the United States and Canada In order to maintain accreditation medical schools are required to ensure that students meet a certain set of standards and competencies defined by the accreditation committees The Function and Structure of a Medical School article is a yearly published article from the LCME that defines 12 accreditation standards 10 Entrustable Professional Activities for entering residency edit The Association of American Medical Colleges AAMC has recommended thirteen Entrustable Professional Activities EPAs that medical students should be expected to accomplish prior to beginning a residency program 11 12 13 EPAs are based on the integrated core competencies developed over the course of medical school training Each EPA lists its key feature associated competencies and observed behaviors required for completion of that activity The students progress through levels of understanding and capability developing with decreasing need for direct supervision 11 12 13 Eventually students should be able to perform each activity independently only requiring assistance in situations of unique or uncommon complexity 11 12 13 The list of topics that EPAs address include History and physical exam skills Differential diagnosis Diagnostic screening tests Orders and prescriptions Patient encounter documentation Oral presentations of patient encounters Clinical questioning using evidence Patient handovers transitions of care Teamwork Urgent Emergency care Informed consent Procedures Safety and improvementPostgraduate education edit nbsp Dean s office at the First Faculty of Medicine Charles University Prague Following completion of entry level training newly graduated doctors are often required to undertake a period of supervised practice before full registration is granted this is most often of one year duration and may be referred to as an internship or provisional registration or residency Further training in a particular field of medicine may be undertaken In the U S further specialized training completed after residency is referred to as fellowship In some jurisdictions this is commenced immediately following completion of entry level training while other jurisdictions require junior doctors to undertake generalist unstreamed training for a number of years before commencing specialization Each residency and fellowship program is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education ACGME a non profit organization led by physicians with the goal of enhancing educational standards among physicians The ACGME oversees all MD and DO residency programs in the United States As of 2019 there were approximately 11 700 ACGME accredited residencies and fellowship programs in 181 specialties and subspecialties 14 Education theory itself is becoming an integral part of postgraduate medical training Formal qualifications in education are also becoming the norm for medical educators such that there has been a rapid increase in the number of available graduate programs in medical education 15 16 Continuing medical education editIn most countries continuing medical education CME courses are required for continued licensing 17 CME requirements vary by state and by country In the US accreditation is overseen by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education ACCME Physicians often attend dedicated lectures grand rounds conferences and performance improvement activities in order to fulfill their requirements Additionally physicians are increasingly opting to pursue further graduate level training in the formal study of medical education as a pathway for continuing professional development 18 19 Online learning editMedical education is increasingly utilizing online teaching usually within learning management systems LMSs or virtual learning environments VLEs 20 21 Additionally several medical schools have incorporated the use of blended learning combining the use of video asynchronous and in person exercises 22 23 A landmark scoping review published in 2018 demonstrated that online teaching modalities are becoming increasingly prevalent in medical education with associated high student satisfaction and improvement on knowledge tests However the use of evidence based multimedia design principles in the development of online lectures was seldom reported despite their known effectiveness in medical student contexts 24 To enhance variety in an online delivery environment the use of serious games which have previously shown benefit in medical education 25 can be incorporated to break the monotony of online delivered lectures 26 Research areas into online medical education include practical applications including simulated patients and virtual medical records see also telehealth 27 When compared to no intervention simulation in medical education training is associated with positive effects on knowledge skills and behaviors and moderate effects for patient outcomes 28 However data is inconsistent on the effectiveness of asynchronous online learning when compared to traditional in person lectures 29 30 Furthermore studies utilizing modern visualization technology i e virtual and augmented reality have shown great promise as means to supplement lesson content in physiological and anatomical education 31 32 Telemedicine telehealth education edit With the advent of telemedicine aka telehealth students learn to interact with and treat patients online an increasingly important skill in medical education 33 34 35 36 In training students and clinicians enter a virtual patient room in which they interact and share information with a simulated or real patient actors Students are assessed based on professionalism communication medical history gathering physical exam and ability to make shared decisions with the patient actor 37 38 Medical education systems by country edit nbsp Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami the primary teaching hospital for the Leonard M Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami July 2010 At present in the United Kingdom a typical medicine course at university is five years or four years if the student already holds a degree Among some institutions and for some students it may be six years including the selection of an intercalated BSc taking one year at some point after the pre clinical studies All programs culminate in the Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery degree abbreviated MBChB MBBS MBBCh BM etc This is followed by two clinical foundation years afterward namely F1 and F2 similar to internship training Students register with the UK General Medical Council at the end of F1 At the end of F2 they may pursue further years of study The system in Australia is very similar with registration by the Australian Medical Council AMC In the US and Canada a potential medical student must first complete an undergraduate degree in any subject before applying to a graduate medical school to pursue an M D or D O program U S medical schools are almost all four year programs Some students opt for the research focused M D Ph D dual degree program which is usually completed in 7 10 years There are certain courses that are pre requisite for being accepted to medical school such as general chemistry organic chemistry physics mathematics biology English labwork etc The specific requirements vary by school In Australia there are two pathways to a medical degree Students can choose to take a five or six year undergraduate medical degree Bachelor of Medicine Bachelor of Surgery MBBS or BMed as a first tertiary degree directly after secondary school graduation or first complete a bachelor s degree in general three years usually in the medical sciences and then apply for a four year graduate entry Bachelor of Medicine Bachelor of Surgery MBBS program 39 40 See North America Medical education in Canada Medical education in Panama Medical education in Mexico Medical education in the United States Europe Medical education in France Medical education in Norway Medical education in the United Kingdom Asia Middle East Oceania Medical education in Australia Medical education in China Medical education in Hong Kong Medical education in India Medical education in Jordan Medical education in the Philippines Medical education in South Korea Africa Medical education in South Africa Medical education in UgandaNorms and values editAlong with training individuals in the practice of medicine medical education influences the norms and values of its participants patients families etc This either occurs through explicit training in medical ethics or covertly through a hidden curriculum a body of norms and values that students encounter implicitly but is not formally taught 41 42 43 While formal ethics courses are a requirement at schools such as those accredited by the LCME gaps between these courses and the hidden curriculum throughout medical education are frequently raised as issues contributing to the culture of medicine 44 45 46 47 The aims of medical ethics training are to give medical doctors the ability to recognise ethical issues reason about them morally and legally when making clinical decisions and be able to interact to obtain the information necessary to do so 48 The hidden curriculum may include the use of unprofessional behaviours for efficiency a or viewing the academic hierarchy as more important than the patient b In certain institutions such as those with LCME accreditation the requirement of professionalism may be additionally weaponized against trainees with complaints about ethics and safety being labelled as unprofessional 50 51 52 53 The hidden curriculum was recently shown to be a cause of reduction in medical student empathy as they progress throughout medical school 54 Integration with health policy editAs medical professional stakeholders in the field of health care i e entities integrally involved in the health care system and affected by reform the practice of medicine i e diagnosing treating and monitoring disease is directly affected by the ongoing changes in both national and local health policy and economics 55 There is a growing call for health professional training programs to not only adopt more rigorous health policy education and leadership training 56 57 58 but to apply a broader lens to the concept of teaching and implementing health policy through health equity and social disparities that largely affect health and patient outcomes 59 60 Increased mortality and morbidity rates occur from birth to age 75 attributed to medical care insurance access quality of care individual behavior smoking diet exercise drugs risky behavior socioeconomic and demographic factors poverty inequality racial disparities segregation and physical environment housing education transportation urban planning 60 A country s health care delivery system reflects its underlying values tolerances expectations and cultures of the societies they serve 61 and medical professionals stand in a unique position to influence opinion and policy of patients healthcare administrators amp lawmakers 56 62 In order to truly integrate health policy matters into physician and medical education training should begin as early as possible ideally during medical school or premedical coursework to build foundational knowledge and analytical skills continued during residency and reinforced throughout clinical practice like any other core skill or competency 58 This source further recommends adopting a national standardized core health policy curriculum for medical schools and residencies in order to introduce a core foundation in this much needed area focusing on four main domains of health care 1 systems and principles e g financing payment models of management information technology physician workforce 2 quality and safety e g quality improvement indicators measures and outcomes patient safety 3 value and equity e g medical economics medical decision making comparative effectiveness health disparities and 4 politics and law e g history and consequences of major legislations adverse events medical errors and malpractice However limitations to implementing these health policy courses mainly include perceived time constraints from scheduling conflicts the need for an interdisciplinary faculty team and lack of research funding to determine what curriculum design may best suit the program goals 58 59 Resistance in one pilot program was seen from program directors who did not see the relevance of the elective course and who were bounded by program training requirements limited by scheduling conflicts and inadequate time for non clinical activities 63 But for students in one medical school study 64 those taught higher intensity curriculum vs lower intensity were three to four times as likely to perceive themselves as appropriately trained in components of health care systems and felt it did not take away from getting poorer training in other areas Additionally recruiting and retaining a diverse set of multidisciplinary instructors and policy or economic experts with sufficient knowledge and training may be limited at community based programs or schools without health policy or public health departments or graduate programs Remedies may include having online courses off site trips to the capitol or health foundations or dedicated externships but these have interactive cost and time constraints as well Despite these limitations several programs in both medical school and residency training have been pioneered 59 63 65 66 67 Lastly more national support and research will be needed to not only establish these programs but to evaluate how to both standardize and innovate the curriculum in a way that is flexible with the changing health care and policy landscape In the United States this will involve coordination with the ACGME Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education a private NPO that sets educational and training standards 68 for U S residencies and fellowships that determines funding and ability to operate Medical education as a subject didactic field editMedical education is also the subject didactic field of educating medical doctors at all levels applying theories of pedagogy in the medical context with its own journals such as Medical Education Researchers and practitioners in this field are usually medical doctors or educationalists Medical curricula vary between medical schools and are constantly evolving in response to the need of medical students as well as the resources available 69 Medical schools have been documented to utilize various forms of problem based learning team based learning and simulation 70 71 72 73 The Liaison Committee on Medical Education LCME publishes standard guidelines regarding goals of medical education including curriculum design implementation and evaluation 10 nbsp Air National Guard Base training in medical simulation The objective structured clinical examinations OSCEs are widely utilized as a way to assess health science students clinical abilities in a controlled setting 74 75 Although used in medical education programs throughout the world the methodology for assessment may vary between programs and thus attempts to standardize the assessment have been made 76 77 Cadaver laboratory edit nbsp Medical student describes anatomical landmarks of a donated human cadaver Medical schools and surgical residency programs may utilize cadavers to identify anatomy study pathology perform procedures correlate radiology findings and identify causes of death 78 79 80 81 82 With the integration of technology traditional cadaver dissection has been debated regarding its effectiveness in medical education but remains a large component of medical curriculum around the world 78 82 Didactic courses in cadaver dissection are commonly offered by certified anatomists scientists and physicians with a background in the subject 78 Medical curriculum and evidence based medical education journals edit Medical curriculum vary widely among medical schools and residency programs but generally follow an evidence based medical education EBME approach 83 These evidence based approaches are published in medical journals The list of peer reviewed medical education journals includes but is not limited to Academic Medicine Medical Education Advances in Health Science Education Medical Teacher Open access medical education journals Perspectives on Medical Education BMC Medical Education MedEDPORTAL 84 Journal of Medical Education and Curricular Development MedConnect MediUnite and MediUnite Journal Graduate Medical Education and Continuing Medical Education focused journals Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions Journal of Graduate Medical Education This is not a complete list of medical education journals Each medical journal in this list has a varying impact factor or mean number of citations indicating how often it is used in scientific research and study See also editDoctors to Be an occasional series on BBC television INMED List of medical schools List of medical education agencies My Medical Education Objective Structured Clinical Examination Perspectives on Medical Education a journal Progress testing Validation of foreign studies and degrees Virtual patient Calgary Cambridge modelExplanatory notes edit As in any crisis the environment has evolved to accept substandard professional behavior in exchange for efficiency or productivity 49 In Coulehan s view the hidden curriculum places the academic hierarchy not the patient at the center of medical education 49 References edit Flores Mateo G Argimon JM July 2007 Evidence based practice in postgraduate healthcare education a systematic review BMC Health Services Research 7 119 doi 10 1186 1472 6963 7 119 PMC 1995214 PMID 17655743 Harden RM Grant J Buckley G Hart IR 1999 01 01 BEME Guide No 1 Best Evidence Medical Education Medical Teacher 21 6 553 62 doi 10 1080 01421599978960 PMID 21281174 S2CID 7233599 Daniels VJ Pugh D December 2018 Twelve tips for developing an OSCE that measures what you want Medical Teacher 40 12 1208 1213 doi 10 1080 0142159X 2017 1390214 PMID 29069965 S2CID 44971925 Wilkinson TJ Wade WB Knock LD May 2009 A blueprint to assess professionalism results of a systematic review Academic Medicine 84 5 551 8 doi 10 1097 ACM 0b013e31819fbaa2 PMID 19704185 S2CID 44915975 Newton PM Najabat Lattif HF Santiago G Salvi A 2021 The Learning Styles Neuromyth Is Still Thriving in Medical Education Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15 708540 doi 10 3389 fnhum 2021 708540 PMC 8385406 PMID 34456698 Masters K January 2020 Edgar Dale s Pyramid of Learning in medical education Further expansion of the myth Medical Education 54 1 22 32 doi 10 1111 medu 13813 PMID 31576610 S2CID 203640807 Fred Herbert L Gonzalo Jed D 2018 06 01 Reframing Medical Education Texas Heart Institute Journal 45 3 123 125 doi 10 14503 THIJ 18 6729 ISSN 0730 2347 PMC 6059511 PMID 30072846 Health Systems Science 9780323694629 US Elsevier Health Retrieved 2024 05 13 Dyrbye LN Thomas MR Natt N Rohren CH August 2007 Prolonged delays for research training in medical school are associated with poorer subsequent clinical knowledge Journal of General Internal Medicine 22 8 1101 6 doi 10 1007 s11606 007 0200 x PMC 2305740 PMID 17492473 a b Standards Publications amp Notification Forms LCME March 31 2020 Retrieved April 17 2020 a b c Obeso V 2017 Core Entrustable Professional Activities for Entering Residency PDF Retrieved 29 April 2020 a b c Ten Cate O March 2013 Nuts and bolts of entrustable professional activities Journal of Graduate Medical Education 5 1 157 8 doi 10 4300 JGME D 12 00380 1 PMC 3613304 PMID 24404246 a b c Cate OT March 2018 A primer on entrustable professional activities Korean Journal of Medical Education 30 1 1 10 doi 10 3946 kjme 2018 76 PMC 5840559 PMID 29510603 Data Resource Book Vol 19 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education 2019 pp 13 19 Tekian A Artino AR September 2013 AM last page master s degree in health professions education programs Academic Medicine 88 9 1399 doi 10 1097 ACM 0b013e31829decf6 PMID 23982511 Tekian A Artino AR September 2014 AM last page Overview of doctoral programs in health professions education Academic Medicine 89 9 1309 doi 10 1097 ACM 0000000000000421 PMID 25006714 Ahmed K Ashrafian H Hanna GB Darzi A Athanasiou T October 2009 Assessment of specialists in cardiovascular practice Nature Reviews Cardiology 6 10 659 67 doi 10 1038 nrcardio 2009 155 PMID 19724254 S2CID 21452983 Cervero RM Artino AR Daley BJ Durning SJ 2017 Health Professions Education Graduate Programs Are a Pathway to Strengthening Continuing Professional Development The Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions 37 2 147 151 doi 10 1097 CEH 0000000000000155 PMID 28562504 S2CID 13954832 Artino AR Cervero RM DeZee KJ Holmboe E Durning SJ April 2018 Graduate Programs in Health Professions Education Preparing Academic Leaders for Future Challenges Journal of Graduate Medical Education 10 2 119 122 doi 10 4300 JGME D 18 00082 1 PMC 5901787 PMID 29686748 Ellaway R Masters K June 2008 AMEE Guide 32 e Learning in medical education Part 1 Learning teaching and assessment Medical Teacher 30 5 455 73 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 475 1660 doi 10 1080 01421590802108331 PMID 18576185 S2CID 13793264 Masters K Ellaway R June 2008 e Learning in medical education Guide 32 Part 2 Technology management and design Medical Teacher 30 5 474 89 doi 10 1080 01421590802108349 PMID 18576186 S2CID 43473920 Evans KH Thompson AC O Brien C Bryant M Basaviah P Prober C Popat RA May 2016 An Innovative Blended Preclinical Curriculum in Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics Impact on Student Satisfaction and Performance Academic Medicine 91 5 696 700 doi 10 1097 ACM 0000000000001085 PMID 26796089 Villatoro T Lackritz K Chan JS 2019 01 01 Case Based Asynchronous Interactive Modules in Undergraduate Medical Education Academic Pathology 6 2374289519884715 doi 10 1177 2374289519884715 PMC 6823976 PMID 31700991 Tang B Coret A Qureshi A Barron H Ayala AP Law M April 2018 Online Lectures in Undergraduate Medical Education Scoping Review JMIR Medical Education 4 1 e11 doi 10 2196 mededu 9091 PMC 5915670 PMID 29636322 Birt J Stromberga Z Cowling M Moro C 2018 01 31 Mobile Mixed Reality for Experiential Learning and Simulation in Medical and Health Sciences Education Information 9 2 31 doi 10 3390 info9020031 ISSN 2078 2489 Moro C Stromberga Z December 2020 Enhancing variety through gamified interactive learning experiences Medical Education 54 12 1180 1181 doi 10 1111 medu 14251 PMID 32438478 Favreau A Minnesota Virtual Clinic Medical Education Software Regents of the University of Minnesota Archived from the original on 2012 03 24 Retrieved 2011 09 13 Cook DA Hatala R Brydges R Zendejas B Szostek JH Wang AT et al September 2011 Technology enhanced simulation for health professions education a systematic review and meta analysis JAMA 306 9 978 88 doi 10 1001 jama 2011 1234 PMID 21900138 Jordan J Jalali A Clarke S Dyne P Spector T Coates W August 2013 Asynchronous vs didactic education it s too early to throw in the towel on tradition BMC Medical Education 13 1 105 doi 10 1186 1472 6920 13 105 PMC 3750828 PMID 23927420 Wray A Bennett K Boysen Osborn M Wiechmann W Toohey S 2017 12 11 Efficacy of an asynchronous electronic curriculum in emergency medicine education in the United States Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 14 29 doi 10 3352 jeehp 2017 14 29 PMC 5801323 PMID 29237247 Moro C Stromberga Z Raikos A Stirling A November 2017 The effectiveness of virtual and augmented reality in health sciences and medical anatomy Anatomical Sciences Education 10 6 549 559 doi 10 1002 ase 1696 PMID 28419750 S2CID 25961448 Moro C Stromberga Z Stirling A 2017 11 29 Virtualisation devices for student learning Comparison between desktop based Oculus Rift and mobile based Gear VR virtual reality in medical and health science education Australasian Journal of Educational Technology 33 6 doi 10 14742 ajet 3840 ISSN 1449 5554 Kononowicz AA Woodham LA Edelbring S Stathakarou N Davies D Saxena N et al July 2019 Virtual Patient Simulations in Health Professions Education Systematic Review and Meta Analysis by the Digital Health Education Collaboration Journal of Medical Internet Research 21 7 e14676 doi 10 2196 14676 PMC 6632099 PMID 31267981 Kovacevic P Dragic S Kovacevic T Momcicevic D Festic E Kashyap R et al June 2019 Impact of weekly case based tele education on quality of care in a limited resource medical intensive care unit Critical Care 23 1 220 doi 10 1186 s13054 019 2494 6 PMC 6567671 PMID 31200761 van Houwelingen CT Moerman AH Ettema RG Kort HS Ten Cate O April 2016 Competencies required for nursing telehealth activities A Delphi study Nurse Education Today 39 50 62 doi 10 1016 j nedt 2015 12 025 PMID 27006033 Editorial Indigenous Law Bulletin 7 16 January February 2010 doi 10 1163 2210 7975 hrd 1758 0046 Cantone RE Palmer R Dodson LG Biagioli FE December 2019 Insomnia Telemedicine OSCE TeleOSCE A Simulated Standardized Patient Video Visit Case for Clerkship Students MedEdPORTAL 15 1 10867 doi 10 15766 mep 2374 8265 10867 PMC 7012306 PMID 32051850 Shortridge A Steinheider B Ciro C Randall K Costner Lark A Loving G June 2016 Simulating Interprofessional Geriatric Patient Care Using Telehealth A Team Based Learning Activity MedEdPORTAL 12 1 10415 doi 10 15766 mep 2374 8265 10415 PMC 6464453 PMID 31008195 Medicine Find My Pathway Find My Pathway Retrieved 2018 10 26 Pathways through specialty medical training Royal Australasian College of Surgeons RACS Retrieved 2018 10 26 Navigating the hidden curriculum in medical school AAMC Retrieved 2023 09 24 Sarikhani Y Shojaei P Rafiee M Delavari S June 2020 Analyzing the interaction of main components of hidden curriculum in medical education using interpretive structural modeling method BMC Medical Education 20 1 176 doi 10 1186 s12909 020 02094 5 PMC 7269001 PMID 32487128 Lempp H Seale C October 2004 The hidden curriculum in undergraduate medical education qualitative study of medical students perceptions of teaching BMJ 329 7469 770 773 doi 10 1136 bmj 329 7469 770 PMC 520997 PMID 15459051 Hafler JP Ownby AR Thompson BM Fasser CE Grigsby K Haidet P et al April 2011 Decoding the learning environment of medical education a hidden curriculum perspective for faculty development Academic Medicine 86 4 440 444 doi 10 1097 ACM 0b013e31820df8e2 PMID 21346498 Shelton W Campo Engelstein L 2022 Confronting the Hidden Curriculum A Four Year Integrated Course in Ethics and Professionalism Grounded in Virtue Ethics In Jones T Pachucki K eds The Medical Health Humanities Politics Programs and Pedagogies Cham Springer International Publishing pp 177 191 doi 10 1007 978 3 031 19227 2 12 ISBN 978 3 031 19227 2 Azmand S Ebrahimi S Iman M Asemani O 2018 Learning professionalism through hidden curriculum Iranian medical students perspective Journal of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine 11 10 PMC 6642446 PMID 31346387 Safari Y Khatony A Khodamoradi E Rezaei M 2020 The role of hidden curriculum in the formation of professional ethics in Iranian medical students A qualitative study Journal of Education and Health Promotion 9 180 doi 10 4103 jehp jehp 172 20 PMC 7482700 PMID 32953908 Standards Publications amp Notification Forms LCME Retrieved 2023 09 24 a b Brainard AH Brislen HC November 2007 Viewpoint learning professionalism a view from the trenches Academic Medicine 82 11 Ovid Technologies Wolters Kluwer Health 1010 1014 doi 10 1097 01 acm 0000285343 95826 94 PMID 17971682 DeLoughery EP May 2018 Professionalism Framings Across Medical Schools Journal of General Internal Medicine 33 5 610 611 doi 10 1007 s11606 018 4314 0 PMC 5910349 PMID 29435728 Corcimaru A Morrell MC Morrell DS April 2018 Do looks matter The role of the Electronic Residency Application Service photograph in dermatology residency selection Dermatology Online Journal 24 4 13030 qt5qc988jz doi 10 5070 D3244039354 PMID 29906000 Ross DA Boatright D Nunez Smith M Jordan A Chekroud A Moore EZ 2017 Differences in words used to describe racial and gender groups in Medical Student Performance Evaluations PLOS ONE 12 8 e0181659 Bibcode 2017PLoSO 1281659R doi 10 1371 journal pone 0181659 PMC 5549898 PMID 28792940 Cerdena JP Asabor EN Rendell S Okolo T Lett E 2022 Resculpting Professionalism for Equity and Accountability Annals of Family Medicine 20 6 573 577 doi 10 1370 afm 2892 PMC 9705046 PMID 36443090 Howick J Dudko M Feng SN Ahmed A Alluri N Nockels K Winter R Holland R April 2023 Why might medical student empathy change throughout medical school a systematic review and thematic synthesis of qualitative studies BMC Medical Education 23 270 270 doi 10 1186 s12909 023 04165 9 PMC 10124056 PMID 37088814 Steinberg ML July 2008 Introduction health policy and health care economics observed Seminars in Radiation Oncology 18 3 149 51 doi 10 1016 j semradonc 2008 01 001 PMID 18513623 a b Schwartz RW Pogge C September 2000 Physician leadership essential skills in a changing environment American Journal of Surgery 180 3 187 92 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 579 8091 doi 10 1016 s0002 9610 00 00481 5 PMID 11084127 Gee RE Lockwood CJ January 2013 Medical education and health policy what is important for me to know how do I learn it and what are the gaps Obstetrics and Gynecology 121 1 9 13 doi 10 1097 AOG 0b013e31827a099d PMID 23262923 S2CID 35826385 a b c Patel MS Davis MM Lypson ML February 2011 Advancing medical education by teaching health policy The New England Journal of Medicine 364 8 695 7 doi 10 1056 NEJMp1009202 PMID 21345098 a b c Heiman HJ Smith LL McKool M Mitchell DN Roth Bayer C December 2015 Health Policy Training A Review of the Literature International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 13 1 ijerph13010020 doi 10 3390 ijerph13010020 PMC 4730411 PMID 26703657 a b Avendano M Kawachi I 2014 01 01 Why do Americans have shorter life expectancy and worse health than do people in other high income countries Annual Review of Public Health 35 307 25 doi 10 1146 annurev publhealth 032013 182411 PMC 4112220 PMID 24422560 Williams TR July 2008 A cultural and global perspective of United States health care economics Seminars in Radiation Oncology 18 3 175 85 doi 10 1016 j semradonc 2008 01 005 PMID 18513627 Beyer DC Mohideen N July 2008 The role of physicians and medical organizations in the development analysis and implementation of health care policy Seminars in Radiation Oncology 18 3 186 93 doi 10 1016 j semradonc 2008 01 006 PMID 18513628 a b Greysen SR Wassermann T Payne P Mullan F December 2009 Teaching health policy to residents three year experience with a multi specialty curriculum Journal of General Internal Medicine 24 12 1322 6 doi 10 1007 s11606 009 1143 1 PMC 2787946 PMID 19862580 Patel MS Lypson ML Davis MM September 2009 Medical student perceptions of education in health care systems Academic Medicine 84 9 1301 6 doi 10 1097 acm 0b013e3181b17e3e PMID 19707077 Catalanotti J Popiel D Johansson P Talib Z December 2013 A pilot curriculum to integrate community health into internal medicine residency training Journal of Graduate Medical Education 5 4 674 7 doi 10 4300 jgme d 12 00354 1 PMC 3886472 PMID 24455022 Rovner J June 9 2016 This Med School Teaches Health Policy Along With The Pills NPR Retrieved December 13 2016 via Kaiser Health News Shah SH Clark MD Hu K Shoener JA Fogel J Kling WC Ronayne J October 2017 Systems Based Training in Graduate Medical Education for Service Learning in the State Legislature in the United States Pilot Study JMIR Medical Education 3 2 e18 doi 10 2196 mededu 7730 PMC 5663953 PMID 29042343 ACGME Core Competencies The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education The Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates July 5 2012 Archived from the original on July 28 2012 Retrieved December 13 2016 Thomas P 2016 Curriculum Development for Medical Education A Six Step Approach Johns Hopkins University Press p 9 ISBN 978 1421418520 Yew EH Goh K 2016 12 01 Problem Based Learning An Overview of its Process and Impact on Learning Health Professions Education 2 2 75 79 doi 10 1016 j hpe 2016 01 004 Burgess A Haq I Bleasel J Roberts C Garsia R Randal N Mellis C October 2019 Team based learning TBL a community of practice BMC Medical Education 19 1 369 doi 10 1186 s12909 019 1795 4 PMC 6792232 PMID 31615507 Scalese RJ Obeso VT Issenberg SB January 2008 Simulation technology for skills training and competency assessment in medical education Journal of General Internal Medicine 23 1 46 9 doi 10 1007 s11606 007 0283 4 PMC 2150630 PMID 18095044 Kilkie S Harris P 2019 11 01 P25 Using simulation to assess the effectiveness of undergraduate education BMJ Simulation and Technology Enhanced Learning 5 Suppl 2 doi 10 1136 bmjstel 2019 aspihconf 130 inactive 2024 05 13 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of May 2024 link Majumder MA Kumar A Krishnamurthy K Ojeh N Adams OP Sa B 2019 06 05 An evaluative study of objective structured clinical examination OSCE students and examiners perspectives Advances in Medical Education and Practice 10 387 397 doi 10 2147 amep s197275 PMC 6556562 PMID 31239801 Onwudiegwu U 2018 Osce Design Development and Deployment Journal of the West African College of Surgeons 8 1 1 22 PMC 6398515 PMID 30899701 Comert M Zill JM Christalle E Dirmaier J Harter M Scholl I 2016 03 31 Hills RK ed Assessing Communication Skills of Medical Students in Objective Structured Clinical Examinations OSCE A Systematic Review of Rating Scales PLOS ONE 11 3 e0152717 Bibcode 2016PLoSO 1152717C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0152717 PMC 4816391 PMID 27031506 Yazbeck Karam V Park YS Tekian A Youssef N December 2018 Evaluating the validity evidence of an OSCE results from a new medical school BMC Medical Education 18 1 313 doi 10 1186 s12909 018 1421 x PMC 6302424 PMID 30572876 a b c Memon I 2018 Cadaver Dissection Is Obsolete in Medical Training A Misinterpreted Notion Medical Principles and Practice 27 3 201 210 doi 10 1159 000488320 PMC 6062726 PMID 29529601 Tabas JA Rosenson J Price DD Rohde D Baird CH Dhillon N August 2005 A comprehensive unembalmed cadaver based course in advanced emergency procedures for medical students Academic Emergency Medicine 12 8 782 5 doi 10 1197 j aem 2005 04 004 PMID 16079434 Pais D Casal D Mascarenhas Lemos L Barata P Moxham BJ Goyri O Neill J March 2017 Outcomes and satisfaction of two optional cadaveric dissection courses A 3 year prospective study PDF Anatomical Sciences Education 10 2 127 136 doi 10 1002 ase 1638 hdl 10400 17 3529 PMID 27483443 S2CID 24795098 Tavares MA Dinis Machado J Silva MC 1 May 2000 Computer based sessions in radiological anatomy one year s experience in clinical anatomy Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy 22 1 29 34 doi 10 1007 s00276 000 0029 z PMID 10863744 S2CID 24564960 a b Korf HW Wicht H Snipes RL Timmermans JP Paulsen F Rune G Baumgart Vogt E 1 February 2008 The dissection course necessary and indispensable for teaching anatomy to medical students Annals of Anatomy Anatomischer Anzeiger 190 1 16 22 doi 10 1016 j aanat 2007 10 001 PMID 18342138 Harden RM Grant J Buckley G Hart IR 1 January 1999 BEME Guide No 1 Best Evidence Medical Education Medical Teacher 21 6 553 62 doi 10 1080 01421599978960 PMID 21281174 S2CID 7233599 MedEDPORTAL Author Handbook PDF Association of American Medical Colleges AAMC 2009 pp 2 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 08 03 Retrieved 2020 04 30 Further reading editBonner TN 2000 Becoming a physician medical education in Britain France Germany and the United States 1750 1945 JHU Press ISBN 978 0 8018 6482 7 Dunn MB Jones C March 2010 Institutional logics and institutional pluralism The contestation of care and science logics in medical education 1967 2005 Administrative Science Quarterly 55 1 114 49 doi 10 2189 asqu 2010 55 1 114 hdl 2152 29317 S2CID 38016621 Gevitz N 2019 The DOs osteopathic medicine in America JHU Press ISBN 978 1 4214 2962 5 Holloway SW 1964 Medical education in England 1830 1858 A sociological analysis History 49 167 299 324 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1964 tb01104 x JSTOR 24404427 Ludmerer KM 1999 Time to heal American medical education from the turn of the century to the era of managed care Oxford Oxford University Press Inc ISBN 978 0 19 535341 9 Papa FJ Harasym PH 1999 Medical curriculum reform in North America 1765 to the present a cognitive science perspective PDF Academic Medicine 74 2 Philadelphia 154 164 doi 10 1097 00001888 199902000 00015 PMID 10065057 dead link Parry N Parry J 1976 The rise of the medical profession a study of collective social mobility London Routledge doi 10 4324 9780429400926 ISBN 978 0 429 40092 6 S2CID 76248773 Porter R 1995 Disease medicine and society in England 1550 1860 Cambridge Oxford University Press Inc ISBN 978 0 521 55791 7 Rothstein WG 1987 American medical schools and the practice of medicine A history Oxford University Press Inc ISBN 978 0 19 536471 2 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Medical Education Official website of the Academy of Medical Educators Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Medical education amp oldid 1223674656, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.