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Introduction
In recent years, medical schools have been faced with tremendous educational
challenges caused by rapid changes in the healthcare scene. With the explosion
of medical information and advances in medical technology, medical students
are now expected to acquire large amounts of knowledge and skills. In
addition, owing to increased affluence and the universal availability
of medical information on the Internet, today’s patients are better
informed about their illnesses and tend to have higher expectations of
their doctor’s ability to advise them appropriately. Given such
an environment, we, as medical educators, have to ensure that our medical
graduates not only acquire the requisite knowledge and skills to have
a sound scientific basis to practise medicine, but our students must also
acquire the ability to communicate well with their patients and colleagues,
and develop appropriate professional attitudes and ethical principles.
Educational Outcomes of Learning
For almost 100 years, our medical school has been producing highly competent
doctors. Our graduates are recognised by the General Medical Council of
the United Kingdom for full registration. They have done extremely well
whenever they go overseas for specialty training, thus earning international
recognition for our high standard of undergraduate and postgraduate medical
education.
Although we are recognised internationally, traditional medical education
has focused mostly on the development of cognitive and psychomotor skills
to ensure that the end product is a technically competent doctor equipped
with the desired knowledge and skills to practise medicine. Today, the
‘complete doctor’ needs to have more skills to be able to
relate well to his/her patients. The educational outcomes
of learning as applied to medical education
can be classified within three learning domains:
-
Cognitive (knowing) domain: Focusing on
knowledge acquisition and intellectual skills and abilities (e.g.
the diagnosis of disease, strategising treatment options).
-
Psychomotor (doing) domain: Relating to
skills that require varying levels of well-coordinated physical activity
and precise manipulative procedures (e.g. simple suturing of an open
wound, performing an endoscopic examination, performing sophisticated
surgical procedures).
-
Affective (feeling) domain: Dealing with
feelings, emotions, mindsets and values, including the nurturing of
desirable attitudes for personal and professional development (e.g.
allaying the concerns and fears of patients, displaying empathy for
the relatives of a patient who has just died, displaying mutual trust
and respect in working with members of the healthcare team, upholding
high ethical standards in practice).
Changing Needs and Changing Paradigms
In this digital era of information explosion and rapid advances in medical
sciences and medical technology, it is imperative for medical educators
to reappraise and to review the undergraduate medical curriculum to match
the changing educational paradigms. The traditional role of the medical
teacher as the ‘sage-in-centre stage’ and as the ‘fountain
of knowledge’ who simply transmits much factual information through
abundant lectures is no longer tenable.
“Today, imaging techniques, colour reproduction,
cheap printing, computer simulations, video-taping, computer databases,
and Internet facilities provide students with excellent opportunities
to learn without requiring a teacher to transmit the available information.
Students may no longer rely on a teacher’s knowledge as the main
source of information.” (Bohuijs, 1998)
The medical teacher now needs to take on additional roles; he/she has
to be the designer and manager of the learning environment who facilitates,
guides and optimises student learning through nurturing the intellectual
and learning process.
“An academic who only presents facts is not
a teacher; a teacher is one who nurtures
the learning process and thereby modifies behavior
and patterns of thinking for a lifetime.” (Woosley, 1997)
Thus, the educational paradigm needs to shift from highly teacher-centred
instruction to student-centred learning. Such a shift would require students
to take on greater initiative and responsibility to direct and to manage
their own learning as well as their educational, personal and professional
development. This poses a major challenge to medical teachers to ensure
that the desired student attitudes and mindsets to learning are nurtured
and developed during the educational preparation of students in medical
school. Thus, medical education today needs to foster and nurture
the development of self-directed learning skills that will lay
the foundation for students to want to engage in life-long continuing
self-education so essential to medical practice, especially in this
millennium.
Communication, Professionalism and Ethics
“Attitudes of mind and of behaviour that befit
a doctor should be inculcated, and should imbue the new graduate with
attributes appropriate to his/her future responsibilities to patients,
colleagues and society in general.” (General Medical Council,
U.K., 1993)
The nature of doctors’ work and their work environment requires
them to interact closely with members of the healthcare team
and their patients. Since patients today are better educated and are generally
more informed about diseases and health matters through the Internet,
the dynamics of the doctor-patient relationship has therefore
changed. Patients now expect, and may even demand to know more about their
sickness, the treatment options available and costs involved. In other
words, there is now an even greater need for doctors to be able to effectively
communicate with and display a much more caring
attitude in the management of their patients. A commentary
in the May 2001 issue of the Alumni Newsletter clearly highlights
this point:
“As medical students, we are taught and taught
a voluminous amount of knowledge that has been acquired through the
practice of medicine. We learn all this and we think that we are now
well equipped to pass examinations and to proceed to practice as physicians,
dental surgeons and pharmacists. But what we need most as practitioners
of our profession is communication, and this is never
taught to us. …We learn to communicate better with our patients
with the passing of time and our patients appreciate us better
as we communicate and explain to them their medical and dental
problems and purpose and function of the drugs in their prescription.
The problems faced with in the practice of
medicine are often related to the lack
of communication between the doctor and his patient. This lack
of communication often is the cause of misunderstanding
that could lead to unnecessary litigation.”
In the educational preparation of medical students then, it has become
more important to ensure that students acquire skills required for their
professional development. It is also crucial that the students practise
dealing with more demanding patients and learn to communicate better when
interacting with members of the healthcare team. Medical education today
must therefore foster the development of interpersonal, communication
and teamwork skills that are essential for doctors to earn the
trust, respect and cooperation of patients and members of the healthcare
team.
Recent advances in medical knowledge and the increasing interest in
biomedical research has brought about new challenges to the doctor. It
is now extremely important for doctors to have a good working knowledge
of medical ethics as well, so that the patients’
rights can be protected and their safety ensured in the clinical setting.
Conclusion
In the educational preparation of today’s medical students to
become competent and caring doctors of tomorrow, the quality
of medical education that we provide needs to ensure that the end-products
(graduates) of our education acquire not only the desired knowledge and
psychomotor skills required of a technically competent practitioner, but
also the desired attitudes and mindsets to learning. In addition, our
graduates are expected to show a more caring attitude in their patient
management and interaction with members of the healthcare team. For this
reason, enhancing learning is the affective (feeling)—yet another
testimony to our continued quest in promoting professionalism and excellence
in medical education in our medical school domain, is now a significant
feature of our recently revised undergraduate medical curriculum.
References
Bohuijs, P.A.J. (1998). ‘The Teacher and Self-directed
Learners’ in Medical Education in the Millennium, Jolly,
B. & Rees, L. (Ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 192–198.
General Medical Council, U.K., (1993): Tomorrow’s
Doctors: Recommendations on Undergraduate Medical Education. (http://www.gmc-uk.org/med_ed/tomdoc.htm).
(Last Accessed: 29 April 2003).
Woosley, R.L. (1997). ‘Foreword’ in Integrated
Pharmacology. Page C.P. et al. (Ed.). London: Mosby. pp iii.
‘Communication’ in Alumni Newsletter.
May 2001, pp. 1.
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