| Literature DB >> 34290812 |
Kamran Sattar1, Muhamad Saiful Bahri Yusoff2, Wan Nor Arifin3, Mohd Azhar Mohd Yasin4, Mohd Zarawi Mat Nor5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Medical Professionalism (MP) establishes the trust between society and doctors. We aimed at finding frequently highlighted qualities of MP in the literature.Entities:
Keywords: Frequently highlighted; Medical education; Medical professionalism; Medical students; Professionalism attributes; Undergraduate
Year: 2021 PMID: 34290812 PMCID: PMC8281152 DOI: 10.12669/pjms.37.4.4004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pak J Med Sci ISSN: 1681-715X Impact factor: 1.088
Fig.1The scoping review consort diagram describing articles’ selection for the medical professionalism review.
List of original MP articles included as the selected studies for final evaluation with the retrieved information.
| (Author /Year) | Location | Aims/objective/purpose | Sample/ study design/instrument | Important results and specific information related to the review question |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lazarus, Chauvin, Rodenhauser, Whitlock | USA | “To evaluate the program for Professional Values and Ethics in Medical Education (PPVEME) to return the focus of our curriculum to the physician-patient–community relationship and to the nurturing of professionalism.” | Students, residents, and faculty. | PPVEME is an endeavor to incorporate professionalism within the learning environment. |
| Ber, Alroy | Israel | “To promote an institutional environment/atmosphere/culture of professional behavior.” | 7-10 student. | Trigger films used were based on various themes, including: |
| Robins, Braddock Iii, Fryer-Edwards | USA | “To examine the practicality of using the taxonomy of American Board of Internal Medicine’s (ABIM’s) Project Professionalism.” | 114 students. | ABIM’s |
| Bryan, Krych, Carmichael, Viggiano, Pawlina | USA | “To determine if peer evaluation and self-evalu8ation used in conjunction and implemented early in the medical curriculum can serve as useful tools to assess and provide feedback regarding professional behavior in first-year medical students.” | 213 students. | Students were deficient in professionalism evaluations. |
| Jha, Bekker, Duffy, Roberts | UK | “To describe the views and experiences individuals have about MP.” | 23 students, doctors, allied health professionals, and lay professionals. | Exploration was done for: (1) “Conceptual example (honest, trustworthy, competent)”; (2) “Behavioral example (communicating effectively, treating patients equally, working in teams).” |
| Finn, Garner, Sawdon | UK | “To describes how medical students perceive professionalism and the context in which it is relevant to them.” | 72 students | Students were alert as to what is expected. |
| Sehiralti, Akpinar, Ersoy | Turkey | “To define these characteristics, and in particular seeking the help of the students themselves to define them.” | 127 students. | Students’ perceived professionalism as being a ‘competent physician.’ |
| Zanetti, Keller, Mazor, Carlin, Alper, Hatem, Gammon, Pugnaire | USA | “To investigate the reliability of standardized patients’ scores of students’ professionalism in performance-based examinations.” | 20 students | The professionalism assessment was established using: |
| Byszewski, Hendelman, McGuinty, Moineau | Canada | “To determine student perception of professionalism.” | 255 students | Role modeling is the most critical component |
| Al-Eraky, Chandratilake, Wajid, Donkers, Van Merriënboer | Egypt & Saudi Arabia | “To develop and validate a questionnaire that measures attitudes of medical students on professionalism in the Arabian context.” | 413students and interns. | “Tangible behaviors are essential to expedite discussion, assessment, and modeling of professionalism. “ |
| Gale-Grant, Gatter, Abel | UK | “To explore the understanding of professionalism.” | 60 third-year students. Questionnaire | Students’ view of professionalism was subjective to: “Role models, media, and parents.” |
| Akhund, Shaikh, Ali | Pakistan | “To assess attitudes of Pakistani and Pakistani heritage students about important elements of professionalism and to determine students’ preferred ways of learning professionalism.” | 127 students | “PSCOM Professionalism Questionnaire was used, and the students rated all the attributes of professionalism as important, and there was no difference across the study years”. |
| Al-Abdulrazzaq, Al-Fadhli, Arshad | Kuwait | “To explore the experiences and views of Kuwait final-year medical students on professionalism.” | 95 students. | The most commonly recorded attributes were: “Punctuality, respect, well-attired.” |
| Klemenc-Ketis, Vrecko | Slovenia | “To determine the views of undergraduate medical students on MP.” | 179 students | Students documented the following as the professionalism dimensions; |
| Klemenc-Ketis, Vrecko | Slovenia | “To develop and validate a scale for the assessment of professionalism in medical students based on students’ perceptions of and attitudes towards professionalism in medicine.” | 12 students | “Professionalism assessment scale (PAS) can be successfully used with undergraduate medical students.” |
| Bhutto, Asif, Jawaid | Pakistan | “To determine the level of professionalism among undergraduate medical students at two public sector medical colleges of Karachi, Pakistan.” | 494 students. | The six elements of professionalism (by ABIM) |
| Randall, Foster, Olsen, Warwick, Fernandez, Crouch | Bethesda | “To describe the views of professionalism held by students and faculty.” | 290 students and faculty. | Following characteristics of professionalism were yielded: “Accountability, responsibility, communication, diligence, emotional maturity, ethical (behavior), honesty, integrity, lifelong-learning patient-first, reliability, respect, service, military |
| Yadav, Jegasothy, Ramakrishnappa, Mohanraj, Senan | Malaysia | “To determine the perceived unethical and unprofessional behavior among medical students.” | 464 students | “Professionalism assessment and evaluation need to be done regularly to determine the impact on the students.” |
MP attributes ≥ 40% highlighted within the retrieved studies.
| Attributes | Frequency (%) | Themes |
|---|---|---|
| ‘Communication’ | 5 (45.45 %) (out of 11 studies) | Nurturing MP |
| ‘Respect’ | 6 (54.55%) (out of 11 studies) | Nurturing MP |
| 4 (57.14 %) (out of 7 studies) | Assessment of MP | |
| ‘Altruism, accountability, excellence, duty, honor, and integrity.’ | 4 (57.14 %) (out of 7 studies) | Assessment of MP |