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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
391

Motivierung von Medizinstudenten zur allgemeinärztlichen Tätigkeit durch Hausärztliche Praktika – eine Prä-Post-Studie

Hönigschmid, Petra 03 June 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Bibliographische Beschreibung Petra Hönigschmid Motivierung von Medizinstudenten zur allgemeinärztlichen Tätigkeit durch Hausärztliche Praktika – eine Prä-Post-Studie Universität Leipzig, Dissertation 62 Seiten, 20 Tabellen, 1 Abbildung, 36 Literaturverweise Referat: In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde untersucht, inwieweit frühzeitige hausärztliche Praktika am Beispiel des Leipziger Wahlfachs Allgemeinmedizin Vorklinik die Einstellung und den Berufswunsch zur Hausarztmedizin beeinflussen. In einer Prä-Post-Studie wurden alle für dieses Wahlfach eingeschriebenen Medizinstudenten der Universität Leipzig von Februar 2008 bis Februar 2010 befragt. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass bei einem geeigneten Lehrkonzept die Ausbildung bei niedergelassenen Hausärzten einen positiven Effekt auf die Karrierewahl Allgemeinmedizin hat. Die große Bandbreite an Erkrankungen, die Behandlung komplexer Krankheitsbilder und der Aufbau langfristiger Patientenbeziehungen wurden dabei sehr geschätzt. Nach dem Praktikum stieg der Berufswunsch Allgemeinmedizin signifikant an. Etwa die Hälfte der Studierenden konnte sich eine niedergelassene Tätigkeit vorstellen. Bezüglich der Kontrollierbarkeit der wöchentlichen Arbeitszeit und der Organisation eines vernünftigen Verhältnisses zwischen Arbeit und Freizeit gab es nach dem Praktikum keine wesentlichen Abweichungen. Die Studierenden schätzten dies als realisierbar ein. Auch eine höhere Arbeitsbelastung des Hausarztes im Vergleich zu anderen Fachärzten konnte nach dem Praktikum nicht bestätigt werden. Die vermutete Arbeitszeit eines Hausarztes wurde nach dem Praktikum nach oben korrigiert. Das Interesse an einer Famulatur, einem PJ-Tertial oder einer Promotion in der Allgemeinmedizin war nach dem Praktikum unverändert hoch. Die Evaluierung der Lehrveranstaltung zeigte, dass die Arbeitsweise des Lehrarztes und die damit verbundene Vorbildwirkung für die Studierenden einen wesentlichen Aspekt für die spätere Karrierewahl darstellen.
392

Aboriginal health in the medical program in British Columbia: A curriculum analysis

De Castro Pereira, Gabriela 25 April 2014 (has links)
It is well documented in the literature that Aboriginal peoples have a lower health status compared to the non-Aboriginal population in Canada. The underlining causes for this health disparity are found in the historical and contemporary practices of colonization and social, economic, and political deprivation. This thesis focuses on another of the complex factors which affect Aboriginal health status: the education and training provided to undergraduate medical students on Aboriginal health issues and the social determinants of health in British Columbia. I conducted a critical discourse analysis of the readings materials of three selected courses. I conclude from the analysis that although some of the themes covered by the courses critically present the historical, social and economic contexts for this health disparity, Aboriginal peoples are still characterized as a needy and sick population. Indigenous issues are far from being centrally positioned in the medical curriculum in British Columbia. / Graduate / 0326 / gabipere@hotmail.com
393

The Impact of uniprofessional medical and nursing education on the ability to practice collaboratively

Veerapen, Kiran 26 April 2012 (has links)
Patient centred collaborative practice between nurses and physicians is currently being promoted worldwide. There is increasing evidence that post licensure interprofessional educational interventions improve patient outcomes but similar evidence for pre-licensure interprofessional learning is lacking. The impact of contemporary nursing and medical education on graduates’ ability to collaborate in the workplace is also unclear. To address this gap, an interview based qualitative study underpinned by hermeneutic phenomenology and informed by the theoretical lens of social identity was designed. Eleven junior registered nurses and eleven junior residents from a single healthcare jurisdiction each, in Canada and the United Kingdom (UK) were interviewed to explore how the processes that lead to socialization, professional identification and identity formation in professional schools are perceived to influence collaborative teamwork upon graduation. Data were as analyzed through iterative naive and thematic interpretations aligned with the hermeneutic process, to arrive at a comprehensive understanding. The impact of contemporary undergraduate nursing and medical education on the ability to practice collaboratively was found to be obfuscated by internal contradictions and overshadowed by the contingencies and demands of the workplace, during residency and early nursing practice in both locations. In medical schools, the intense socialization described in literature was replaced by individual reflection and a struggle to maintain work-life balance. Values internalized were of a sense of responsibility and hard work. Students espoused an attitude of collaboration but lacked training in enabling competencies and practical application. Exposure to interprofessional learning and its impact was variable and inconsistent and formal assertions of collaboration were not consistently modeled by faculty. In nursing schools, the value of caring, self-awareness and assertiveness was promoted. Training for collaboration with physicians was largely transactional and teaching about the status of the nurse vis-à-vis the physician was mired in contradictions. Residents and the nurses could not rely on their experience of professional school as they transited to the workplace. Initiation was frequently precipitous and contingencies of the workplace determined how they acted. For residents the community of clinical practice was fluid and repeatedly new. Both residents and nurses were overwhelmed by unpreparedness, workload, and responsibility and acted to get by and get the job done. Residents learned to preface doing the best for the patient and not compromising patient care, while nurses became proficient at routine tasks and found fulfilment as the patient’s advocate. There was a propensity for conflict when uniprofessional roles and values collided. In busy wards each group had interdependent but competing priorities which lead to adversarial expressions of uniprofessional identity and consequent derogatory out-group stereotyping. In contrast situations demanding urgent focused attention, such as a cardiac arrest, lead to the spontaneous formation of a collaborative team which briefly expressed an interprofessional identity. Complex cross-generational and gender based interactions were sometimes adversarial and provoked resentment. Consequently junior nurses retreated to derive fulfilment as the patient`s advocate while residents looked forward to collaborating with other health professionals on their own terms, in the future. Neither contemporary professional education nor the hospital environment sustained consistent collaborative practice. / Graduate
394

Aboriginal health in the medical program in British Columbia: A curriculum analysis

De Castro Pereira, Gabriela 25 April 2014 (has links)
It is well documented in the literature that Aboriginal peoples have a lower health status compared to the non-Aboriginal population in Canada. The underlining causes for this health disparity are found in the historical and contemporary practices of colonization and social, economic, and political deprivation. This thesis focuses on another of the complex factors which affect Aboriginal health status: the education and training provided to undergraduate medical students on Aboriginal health issues and the social determinants of health in British Columbia. I conducted a critical discourse analysis of the readings materials of three selected courses. I conclude from the analysis that although some of the themes covered by the courses critically present the historical, social and economic contexts for this health disparity, Aboriginal peoples are still characterized as a needy and sick population. Indigenous issues are far from being centrally positioned in the medical curriculum in British Columbia. / Graduate / 0326 / gabipere@hotmail.com
395

Examining the Resident-Medical Student Shadowing Program: a concurrent triangulation mixed methods randomized control trial

Turner, Simon 06 1900 (has links)
The Resident-Medical Student Shadowing Program is a novel program in which first-year medical students shadowed a first-year resident during their clinical duties. It was developed to enhance the preparedness of medical students for clinical training. To examine the program’s effectiveness, a randomized control trial was conducted within a concurrent triangulation mixed methods study. Student participants were compared to controls using validated questionnaires. Participants’ experiences were further explored using semi-structured interviews. Results indicate that participation gave students an understanding of the clinical environment and their role within it, and taught them the skills and knowledge needed to perform that role. Students’ learning was enhanced by the relationship developed with their resident, facilitated by the residents’ approachability and relatability and their dedication to teaching. Residents, in turn, gained expertise in teaching and learned about professionalism. Suggestions for implementing this program in the future as well as future directions for research are discussed. / Measurement, Evaluation and Cognition
396

Optimising Australian postgraduate medical education and training in nephrology

Lane, Cathie Anne, Clinical School - St George Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW January 2009 (has links)
The optimal manner in which to train nephrologists has not been studied. The objectives of this research were to determine:- 1. The educational and historical basis underpinning the Australian nephrology training program. 2. The drivers surrounding a career choice in nephrology. 3. What constitutes an ???ideal??? nephrologist and how nephrologists spend their work time, thereby identifying skills and attributes to be fostered in training. 4. Impediments to training, including examination of the available workforce. Five sub studies were undertaken, utilising a combined quantitative and qualitative approach (mixed methods): 1) A national Basic Physician Trainee (BPT) questionnaire, 2) a national nephrology workforce study, and in-depth interviews of: 3) nephrology patients, 4) nephrology trainees and 5) practicing nephrologists. New findings arising from this research reveal: doctors choose nephrology as a career if exposed to the specialty in a positive manner with good role models, however, there are a range of modifiable factors that make nephrology unattractive to many BPTs; workload is high, impacting negatively on training and trainee recruitment; Nephrologists spend most time in the management of dialysis and transplant patients but have a range of other roles in day to day practice, essential information to develop a competency based training program; availability of nephrologists for training is suboptimal and will likely worsen; Patients and doctors apply and weight parameters differently when defining an ???ideal nephrologist???. Both groups believed that specialist knowledge remains an essential requirement but patients focused more on good communication skills. This research provides evidence that the training program should incorporate training in advanced communication and basic research skills and promotion of an holistic approach to patient care. There is no formal alignment of training with assessment. Trainees and nephrologists believe that feedback is critical to learning, yet the assessment process is not underpinned by sound educational principles. This can be rectified using the findings of this research in conjunction with curriculum development and performance assessment. This research should provide an approach to the examination of training that is applicable to many internal medicine specialties. Importantly, nephrology training can now be improved with sound educational principles, underpinned by the findings of this research.
397

Improving the safety of junior doctors' prescribing - systems, skills, attitudes and behaviours

Coombes, Ian Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
398

A clinically valid simulator with tactile sensing to train specialists to perform cochlear implantation

Todd, Catherine Angela. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Wollongong, 2006. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references: leaf 225-237.
399

Learning across paradigms : towards an understanding of the development of medical teaching practice /

Bolander Laksov, Klara, January 2007 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karolinska institutet, 2007. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
400

Exploring the use of a web-based virtual patient to support learning through reflection

Chesher, Douglas William. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Sydney, 2005. / Title from title screen (viewed 19 May 2008). Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to the Dept. of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine. Degree awarded 2005; thesis submitted 2004. Includes bibliographical references. Also available in print form.

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