Skip to main content

Home/ Medical Education/ Group items tagged in

Rss Feed Group items tagged

anonymous

Educational Strategies to Promote Clinical Diagnostic Reasoning - NEJM - 0 views

  •  
    "linical teachers differ from clinicians in a fundamental way. They must simultaneously foster high-quality patient care and assess the clinical skills and reasoning of learners in order to promote their progress toward independence in the clinical setting.1 Clinical teachers must diagnose both the patient's clinical problem and the learner's ability and skill."
anonymous

Teaching Empathy to Medical Students: An Updated, Systemati... : Academic Medicine - 1 views

  •  
    "These findings suggest that educational interventions can be effective in maintaining and enhancing empathy in undergraduate medical students. In addition, they highlight the need for multicenter, randomized controlled trials, reporting long-term data to evaluate the longevity of intervention effects. Defining empathy remains problematic, and the authors call for conceptual clarity to aid future research."
anonymous

Professionalism: The "good doctor" discussion - 2 views

  •  
    "Professionalism in medicine is, in essence, a conversation about what it means to be a good doctor. It has been a major topic of discussion in the field for many years and will likely remain so for years to come. Physicians still debate how to define it, how to assess it and how to teach it. Younger doctors sometimes have different ideas on what it means to be a professional than older colleagues. "
anonymous

The minimal relationship between simulation fidelity and transfer of learning - Norman ... - 0 views

  •  
    "Both HFS and LFS learning resulted in consistent improvements in performance in comparisons with no-intervention control groups. However, nearly all the studies showed no significant advantage of HFS over LFS, with average differences ranging from 1% to 2%."
anonymous

Development and validation of a comprehensive curriculum to teach an advanced minimally... - 0 views

  •  
    "Participation in a comprehensive ex vivo training curriculum for laparoscopic colorectal surgery results in improved technical knowledge and improved performance in the operating room compared with conventional residency training"
anonymous

Features and uses of high-fidelity medical simulations that lead to effective learning:... - 0 views

  •  
    "While research in this field needs improvement in terms of rigor and quality, high-fidelity medical simulations are educationally effective and simulation-based education complements medical education in patient care settings."
anonymous

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

  •  
    "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."
anonymous

Peer Review | Spring 2009 | Understanding Great Teaching - 0 views

  •  
    "Without some definitions, all attempts to improve teaching wander aimlessly in a sea of conflicting ambitions. In this essay, we offer a way across those troubled waters. With a definition of good teaching clearly in mind, we can then offer some insights into how the best teachers achieve them. "
anonymous

Cognitive debiasing 2: impediments to and strategies for change -- Croskerry et al. -- ... - 0 views

  •  
    " We stress the importance of ambient and contextual influences on the quality of individual decision making and the need to address factors known to impair calibration of the decision maker. We also emphasise the importance of introducing these concepts and corollary development of training in critical thinking in the undergraduate level in medical education. "
anonymous

The minimal relationship between simulation fidelit... [Med Educ. 2012] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  •  
    "Both HFS and LFS learning resulted in consistent improvements in performance in comparisons with no-intervention control groups. However, nearly all the studies showed no significant advantage of HFS over LFS, with average differences ranging from 1% to 2%."
anonymous

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

  •  
    "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

Using observed structured teaching exercises (OSTE) to enhance hospitalist teaching dur... - 0 views

  •  
    "We found incorporating OSTEs into a FCR faculty development program to be an effective strategy for improving faculty teaching behavior. Additional study is needed to determine if this strategy results in sustained improvements in conducting FCRs in real inpatient settings. "
Dustin Rudolph

The key to increasing quality of life and reducing overall health care costs in America... - 2 views

As the debate races on in how to reform our health care system in America so that everyone can enjoy access to affordable and quality healthcare there is one key ingredient that isn't being talked ...

health care diet lifestyle reform

started by Dustin Rudolph on 29 Jun 09 no follow-up yet
anonymous

Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media - 1 views

  •  
    "The Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media, a first-of-its-kind social media center focused on health care, builds on Mayo Clinic's leadership among health care providers in adopting social media tools, which began with podcasting in 2005. Mayo Clinic has the most popular medical provider channel on YouTube and more than 60,000 "followers" on Twitter, as well as an active Facebook page with well over 20,000 connections. With its News Blog, Podcast Blog and Sharing Mayo Clinic, a blog that enables patients and employees to tell their Mayo Clinic stories, Mayo has been a pioneer in hospital blogging. MayoClinic.com, Mayo's consumer health information site, also hosts a dozen blogs on topics ranging from Alzheimer's to The Mayo Clinic Diet."
Anne Marie Cunningham

Twitter in higher education - 0 views

  • Rather than waiting until the end of the module to fill in a feedback form Twitter can be used as a means to generate immediate feedback about a class or event. It can be used to encourage particular teaching methods and offer advice about how to do things differently.
  • Distance learners – Using Twitter to communicate with distance learners has the potential to offer students greater learning support and encouragement throughout their courses.
  • Encouraging students to sign up to external services may not be such a good idea as there are terms and conditions which apply to these services that are outside agreements students have already signed to make use of university services;
  •  
    A blog post on the use of Twitter in Higher Education
  •  
    blog post by Alexis (Lex) Rigby, librarian in Sheffield
Natalie Lafferty

Pause | Welcome to the Pause Website - 0 views

  •  
    The Pause website sims to ensure that medics will be prudent in their prescribing of antibiotics and promote prudent use of them in whatever clinical context tehy are working in. You can create an account and the site includes a series of clinical vignettes which can be used as learnign resources.
Anne Marie Cunningham

Wiley InteSpontaneous Action and Transformative Learning: Empirical investigations and ... - 0 views

  •  
    How could this impact medical education?
  •  
    Whereas present theories of transformative learning tend to focus on the rational and reflective actor, in this article it is suggested that spontaneous action may play a decisive role in transformative learning too. In the spontaneity of action, novelty finds its way into life, gains momentum, is respected by others and reflected by the actor. Such transformation processes are investigated both with the means of theoretical reflection and of empirical inquiry. Based on nine narrative interviews typical phases of transformative learning processes are identified. Owing to the comparative nature of the study, it was also possible to develop an age-related typology that overlaps certain phases of the transformation process. These empirical findings constitute the background against which the nexus of spontaneous action and transformative learning is reflected theoretically. Theories drawn upon include John Dewey's Pragmatism and George Herbert Mead's Social Pragmatism. Both scholars provide rich theoretical concepts for reflecting on the nature of that what so often eludes from the control of both educators and learners: the spontaneity of the beginning.
Peter Kimmich

Health Care Training & Career Guide - 1 views

  •  
    Whether your aim is to find a nursing school in Florida, a medical assisting program in Texas or a radiology course in California, these information resources and school search links will help you learn more about the health care career you're considering, and help you locate your school.
anonymous

Clinical Trials Tool Kit - 0 views

  •  
    On this site you will find practical help when trying to meet the requirements of the UK Medicines for Human Use (Clinical Trials) Regulations 2004. These regulations implement the EU Clinical Trials Directive in the UK. In light of amendments to these regulations in 2006, we are currently working to update this site. This will be finalised following publication of the specific modality for non-commercial trials.
anonymous

Hippocampus Required - 0 views

  •  
    The hippocampus plays a vital role in enhancing memory in those who are actively engaged in learning something new. It coordinates with other brain structures to accomplish different tasks, such as recognizing an object one has seen before or remembering its original location."
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 664 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page