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anonymous

Study: Pharmacy and medical students have similar attitudes toward underserved - - Mode... - 0 views

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    While views of medical students fluctuated more during their schooling, the medical students left with slightly more favorable attitudes toward the underserved than those held by departing pharmacy students.
anonymous

Medical student attitudes toward video games and related new media technologies in medi... - 1 views

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    "Overall, medical student respondents, including many who do not play video games, held highly favorable views about the use of video games and related new media technology in medical education. Significant gender differences in game play experience and attitudes may represent male video game design bias that stresses male cognitive aptitudes; medical educators hoping to create serious games that will appeal to both men and women must avoid this."
anonymous

JMIR--Understanding the Factors That Influence the Adoption and Meaningful Use of Socia... - 1 views

shared by anonymous on 07 Oct 12 - No Cached
Dianne Rees liked it
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    Based on the results of this study, the use of social media applications may be seen as an efficient and effective method for physicians to keep up-to-date and to share newly acquired medical knowledge with other physicians within the medical community and to improve the quality of patient care. Future studies are needed to examine the impact of the meaningful use of social media on physicians' knowledge, attitudes, skills, and behaviors in practice.
anonymous

How to Listen When Someone Is Venting - Mark Goulston - Harvard Business Review - 0 views

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    "And yet a lot of people don't know how to listen to someone venting. Usually, people take one of two attitudes. Option 1 is to jump in and give advice -- but this is not the same as listening, and the person doing the venting may respond with "Just listen to me! Don't tell me what to do." Option 2 (usually attempted after Option 1) is to swing to the other extreme, and sit there silently. But this doesn't actively help the person doing the venting to drain their negative emotions. Consequently, it is about as rewarding as venting to your dog."
anonymous

Undermining behaviour - 1 views

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    "The information and video below gives valuable insight into what is bullying, harassment and undermining behaviour and how these issues can be constructively dealt with. In itself this educational tool, although helpful, will not make change happen. This material would be best used as part of a wider learning experience where individuals can make sense of the issues and reflect on their own experience, attitude and behaviour."
anonymous

The patient as text_ a challenge for problem-based.pdf - 0 views

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    To explore the values and assumptions underlying problem-based learning (PBL) cases through narrative analysis, in order to consider the ways by which paper cases may affect student attitudes and values.
anonymous

The Clinical Assessment of Substance Use Disorders - publication - MedEdPORTAL - 0 views

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    "To describe the essential components of the medical model of substance use disorders. To delineate the interviewing skills necessary to screen effectively for substance use and abuse. To understand the high rate of psychiatric and medical co-morbidity and more effectively screen patients for these disorders. To demonstrate skills for evaluating patients' stage of change, readiness to accept the diagnosis, and readiness to undertake behavior change. To clearly and supportively recommend treatment to patients with substance use disorders. To describe the skills required for addiction prevention counseling. To define the skills that help set respectful limits on patient requests for prescription medication. To demonstrate awareness of how physician/clinician attitudes toward patients with substance use disorders impact recognition, diagnosis, and treatment of patients. To demonstrate knowledge of substance use disorder treatment standards and the ability to recommend appropriate referrals."
anonymous

Physical Webbing: Collaborative kinesthetic three-dimensional Mind Maps® - 1 views

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    Qualitative analysis of the attitudinal surveys following the activity provided data regarding students' preference for the Physical Webbing activity over the traditional lecture, acceptance of participatory manipulatives, perceived learning and attitudes towards collaborative kinesthetic three-dimensional Mind Mapping.
anonymous

The feedback sanction. [Acad Emerg Med. 2000] - PubMed - NCBI - 1 views

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    "Good feedback is a necessary condition for well-calibrated performance by individuals, and is integral to effective team function. More needs to be known about outcomes for feedback to work efficiently. The critical role of feedback in other aspects of ED function, such as education and human factors engineering, should be emphasized. The current interest in medical error and evolving attitudes toward a new culture of patient safety provide a unique opportunity to examine feedback and the critical role it plays in ED function."
anonymous

Perceptions and attitudes toward virtual-reality medical training: The Ann Myers Medica... - 1 views

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    Slideshow
anonymous

Affective Domain in Science - 1 views

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    "As science faculty, we naturally emphasize the cognitive domain in our teaching. After all, students think and learn with their brains (we hope!). Yet the affective domain can significantly enhance, inhibit or even prevent student learning. The affective domain includes factors such as student motivation, attitudes, perceptions and values. Teachers can increase their effectiveness by considering the affective domain in planning courses, delivering lectures and activities, and assessing student learning."
catherine hyde

Theatre-in-Education | CragRats - 0 views

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    long setablised theatre group to explore attitudes
anonymous

Fellows as teachers: a model to enhance pediatric resident education - 0 views

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    While fellows are often believed to be a detracting factor to residency training, we found that pediatric resident attitudes toward the fellows were generally positive. In our experience, in the specialty of neonatology a fellow-led education program can positively contribute to both resident and fellow learning and satisfaction.
anonymous

Student-led rural health fairs: attempting to im... [South Med J. 2011] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    "Fairs provide medical students exposure to rural health issues through the valuable opportunity of using risk factor screening tools and counseling. This provides valuable information to patients of rural communities. Future research should examine how fairs influence student knowledge and attitudes toward rural health and affect health outcomes."
anonymous

Teaching Medical Students About Disability: The Use of Stand... : Academic Medicine - 0 views

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    "The renewed emphasis on clinical skills in medical education comes at a time when there is also increasing focus on the need to provide better care for populations that experience health disparities.2,3,10 SPs provide a unique opportunity to meet both the general goals of medical education in developing students' clinical skills and goals specific to enhancing and evaluating students' knowledge, attitudes, and skills with regard to patients with disabilities."
anonymous

Narrative-Based Medicine: Potential, Pitfalls, and Practice - 0 views

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    "Narratives have always been a vital part of medicine. Stories about patients, the experience of caring for them, and their recovery from illness have always been shared-among physicians as well as among patients and their relatives. With the evolution of "modern" medicine, narratives were increasingly neglected in favor of "facts and findings," which were regarded as more scientific and objective. Now, in recent years medical narrative is changing-from the stories about patients and their illnesses, patient narratives and the unfolding and interwoven story between health care professionals and patients are both gaining momentum, leading to the creation or defining of narrative-based medicine (NBM). The term was coined deliberately to mark its distinction from evidence-based medicine (EBM); in fact, NBM was propagated to counteract the shortcomings of EBM.1,2 But what is NBM? Is it a specific therapeutic tool, a special form of physician-patient communication, a qualitative research tool, or does it simply signify a particular attitude towards patients and doctoring? It can be all of the above with different forms or genres of narrative or practical approach called for depending on the field of application. "
anonymous

Does the inclusion of 'professional development' teaching improve medical students' com... - 0 views

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    "Students receiving the professional development training showed significant improvements in certain communication skills, but students in both cohorts improved over time. The lack of a relationship between observed communication skills and patient-centred attitudes may be a reflection of students' inexperience in working with patients, resulting in 'patient-centredness' being an abstract concept. Students in the early years of their medical course may benefit from further opportunities to practise basic communication skills on a one-to-one basis with patients. "
Dingwall PGME

Professionalism: The view from outside medicine - 2 views

    • Dingwall PGME
       
      Relevant evidence on this statement would be nice to avoid a "kids these days" narrative. Any suggestions or sources would be appreciated.
  • There tends to be an attitude within the profession that doctors are inherently “good,” that they are either altruistic or, with gentle prodding, can become altruistic. A more realistic outlook, however, might be that people enter various professions for various reasons and with varying levels of competence, and doctors are no different.
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    "This is all about patients. This is an updated professionalism, about quality of care and evidence-based medicine. "
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    "Evaluating professionalism in medicine from the outside, as a neutral observer rather than a passionate practitioner, can provide insights unlikely to arise within the profession itself. "
anonymous

Perspective: The Negativity Bias, Medical Education... [Acad Med. 2012] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    "Here, the authors examine the concept of negativity bias in the context of academic medicine, arguing that culture is affected by serially emphasizing the inherent bias to recognize and remember the negative. They explore the potential role of practices rooted in positive psychology as powerful tools to counteract the negativity bias and aid in achieving desired culture change."
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