Medical education
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Death and dying occur in almost all areas of medicine; it is essential to equip doctors with the knowledge, skills and attitudes they need to care for patients at the end of life. Little is known about what doctors learn about end-of-life care while at medical school and how they learn to care for dying patients in their first year as doctors. ⋯ Undergraduate medical education is currently failing to prepare junior doctors for their role in caring for dying patients by omitting to provide meaningful contact with these patients during medical school. This lack of exposure prevents trainee doctors from realising their own learning needs, which only become evident when they step onto the wards as doctors and are expected to care for these patients. Newly qualified doctors perceive that they receive little formal teaching about palliative or end-of-life care in their new role and the culture within the hospital setting does not encourage learning about this subject. They also report that they learn from 'trial and error' while 'doing the job', but that their skills and knowledge are limited and they therefore seek advice from those outside their usual medical team, mainly from nursing staff and members of palliative care teams.
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Comparative Study
Active learning on the ward: outcomes from a comparative trial with traditional methods.
Academic activity during internship is essentially practical and ward rounds are traditionally considered the cornerstone of clinical education. However, the efficacy and effectiveness of ward rounds for learning purposes have been under-investigated and it is necessary to assess alternative educational paradigms for this activity. ⋯ The active methodology produced better results than the traditional methodology in a ward-based context. This study seems to be valuable in terms of the new evidence it demonstrates on learning methodologies in the context of the ward round.
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Historical Article
Revolution or evolution? Putting the Flexner Report in context.