Literature DB >> 18564097

Challenges of educating for medical professionalism: who should step up to the line?

Alena M Buyx1, Bruce Maxwell, Bettina Schöne-Seifert.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: The teaching of professionalism has recently become an important issue in medical education. Medical professionalism remains controversial, but several recently published institutional documents on professionalism seem to express an implicit, yet broad consensus on three points: that professionalism mainly consists of adherence to a specific set of professional attributes constitutive of medical role morality and readily identifiable as virtues of medical professionalism (VMP); that medical education needs to focus on the endowment of these attributes, and that medical ethicists should play a central role in assuming this educational responsibility.
METHODS: This paper examines the assumption that the task of supporting the development of the VMP should primarily fall to medical ethicists. Considerations in favour of this position are weighted against a set of countervailing considerations. The latter include the charge that the VMP are too vague as educational guidelines, that they may not be teachable, and that the responsibility for their development must be shared across the medical faculty.
CONCLUSIONS: Medical ethics educators are right to embrace the professionalism agenda on four conditions: that the limitations of addressing the formation of professional attributes in university-based teaching are recognised; that there is clinical as well as university-based evaluation of professional attributes; that the development of the VMP as a process of professional socialisation is seen as an interdisciplinary educational project, and that the examination and explanation of the cognitive grounds of the VMP are the focus of medical educators' activities.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18564097     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2008.03112.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Educ        ISSN: 0308-0110            Impact factor:   6.251


  7 in total

Review 1.  [Medical ethics teaching].

Authors:  Alena M Buyx; Bruce Maxwell; Holger Supper; Bettina Schöne-Seifert
Journal:  Wien Klin Wochenschr       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 1.704

2.  How important is medical ethics and history of medicine teaching in the medical curriculum? An empirical approach towards students' views.

Authors:  Stefan Schulz; Barbara Woestmann; Bert Huenges; Christoph Schweikardt; Thorsten Schäfer
Journal:  GMS Z Med Ausbild       Date:  2012-02-15

3.  Ethical problems in pediatrics: what does the setting of care and education show us?

Authors:  Jucélia Maria Guedert; Suely Grosseman
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2012-03-16       Impact factor: 2.652

4.  Enhancing patient safety by integrating ethical dimensions to Critical Incident Reporting Systems.

Authors:  Kai Wehkamp; Eva Kuhn; Rainer Petzina; Alena Buyx; Annette Rogge
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2021-03-08       Impact factor: 2.652

5.  Development and Validation of a Scale Measuring Humanistic Professional Awareness for Healthcare Students and Providers.

Authors:  Hung-Chang Liao; Cheng-Yi Huang; Ya-Huei Wang
Journal:  J Multidiscip Healthc       Date:  2021-11-19

6.  A comprehensive model of hidden curriculum management in medical education.

Authors:  Shahram Yazdani; Sedigheh Momeni; Leila Afshar; Muhamadreza Abdolmaleki
Journal:  J Adv Med Educ Prof       Date:  2019-07

7.  Teaching medical professionalism: a qualitative exploration of persuasive communication as an educational strategy.

Authors:  Michael Page; Paul Crampton; Rowena Viney; Antonia Rich; Ann Griffin
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2020-03-17       Impact factor: 2.463

  7 in total

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