Literature DB >> 21557101

Rethinking professionalism in medical education through formation.

Timothy P Daaleman1, Warren A Kinghorn, Warren P Newton, Keith G Meador.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Contemporary educational approaches to professionalism do not take into account the dominant influence that the culture of academic medicine has on the nascent professional attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors of medical learners. This article examines formation as an organizing principle for professionalism in medical education. Virtue, the foundation to understanding professionalism, is the habits and dispositions that are fostered in individuals but that are embedded in learning environments. Formation, the ongoing integration of an individual, growing in self-awareness and in recognition of a life of service, with others who share in the common mission of a larger group, depicts this process. One model of formation considers a continuum from novice to more advance stages that is predicated on rules that must be applied in greater contextually shaped situations. Within medical education, formation is the process by which lives of service are created and sustained by learning communities that promote human capacities for intuition, empathy, and compassion. An imagined curriculum in formation would link the lived experiences of mentors and learners with an interdisciplinary set of didactic materials in an intentionally progressive fashion.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21557101

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fam Med        ISSN: 0742-3225            Impact factor:   1.756


  6 in total

1.  How virtue ethics informs medical professionalism.

Authors:  Susan D McCammon; Howard Brody
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  2012-12

2.  Religion, Spirituality, and the Hidden Curriculum: Medical Student and Faculty Reflections.

Authors:  Michael J Balboni; Julia Bandini; Christine Mitchell; Zachary D Epstein-Peterson; Ada Amobi; Jonathan Cahill; Andrea C Enzinger; John Peteet; Tracy Balboni
Journal:  J Pain Symptom Manage       Date:  2015-05-27       Impact factor: 3.612

3.  The Perceptions of Professionalism by 1(st) and 5(th) Grade Medical Students.

Authors:  Zalika Klemenc-Ketis; Helena Vrecko
Journal:  Acta Inform Med       Date:  2014-10-29

4.  [Medical empathy of physicians-in-training who are enrolled in professional training programs. A comparative intercultural study in Spain].

Authors:  Roberto Delgado-Bolton; Montserrat San-Martín; Adelina Alcorta-Garza; Luis Vivanco
Journal:  Aten Primaria       Date:  2015-12-24       Impact factor: 1.137

5.  Medical student opinions on character development in medical education: a national survey.

Authors:  George B Carey; Farr A Curlin; John D Yoon
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2015-09-18

6.  "Can virtue be taught?": a content analysis of medical students' opinions of the professional and ethical challenges to their professional identity formation.

Authors:  Michael Hawking; Jenny Kim; Melody Jih; Chelsea Hu; John D Yoon
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2020-10-22       Impact factor: 2.463

  6 in total

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