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1.
J Nippon Med Sch ; 91(2): 136-139, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38777779

ABSTRACT

All life science and medical research involving human subjects must be conducted in compliance with the Declaration of Helsinki and the relevant laws and guidelines. Additionally, its scientific and ethical suitability must be reviewed by a committee well versed in the nature and content of the research. Failure to comply with these requirements when conducting research involving human subjects is a serious violation of Japanese laws, guidelines, and local regulations, so several ethics committees and institutional review boards have been established within the Nippon Medical School (NMS) Foundation and its affiliated institutions. It is essential for investigators to keep up to date with the latest developments in the ethical review process and to ensure that any projects they propose to embark on are subjected to an appropriate ethical review before the research is initiated. To help researchers and other staff affiliated with the NMS Foundation keep abreast of these developments, this report outlines NMS's current ethical review processes for research involving human subjects.


Subject(s)
Ethics Committees, Research , Schools, Medical , Humans , Biomedical Research/ethics , Ethical Review , Ethics, Research , Helsinki Declaration , Human Experimentation/ethics , Human Experimentation/legislation & jurisprudence , Japan , Schools, Medical/ethics
2.
Ann Anat ; 254: 152243, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38460856

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Body donation is integral to anatomy education, but procurement can be ethically fraught. While voluntary donation is preferred, the use of unclaimed bodies, although considered unethical, is a primary means for body procurement in some countries. This mixed methods study examined historical trends and anatomy technical staff perspectives on body donation in two Zimbabwean medical schools. METHODOLOGY AND MAIN FINDINGS: In Phase 1, 194 cadaver paper records from January 1984 to January 2021 were reviewed. Unclaimed bodies accounted for 67% while 33% (all white Zimbabweans) were voluntarily donated. Most cadavers were black Africans (62.4%) followed by white Zimbabweans (34.0%). Race was not indicated in seven (3.6%) records. In Phase 2, semi-structured interviews were conducted with seven technicians responsible for sourcing cadavers at the two institutions. Data were thematically analysed resulting in the development of eight themes, arranged into three domains. Cadaver procurement themes related to (1) cadaver source, (2) adherence to procurement guidelines, (3) screening for suitability, and (4) cultural and religious beliefs. Cadaver embalmment focused on (5) embalming practices, and (6) hospital mortuary-based embalming. Finally, (7) disposal processes and (8) resource constraints were found to influence cadaver disposal practices. CONCLUSIONS: Contrary to best practice, there is continued reliance on the use of unclaimed bodies to support anatomy education in the two Zimbabwean medical schools. Improving the ethical sourcing of bodies requires increased efforts to educate all Zimbabweans, especially the black majority, about the role and importance of voluntary body donation in medical education. Additionally, well-structured, and well-resourced body donation programs could enhance ethical procurement.


Subject(s)
Anatomy , Cadaver , Schools, Medical , Tissue and Organ Procurement , Zimbabwe , Humans , Schools, Medical/ethics , Anatomy/education , Anatomy/ethics , Male , Female , Tissue and Organ Procurement/ethics , Tissue and Organ Procurement/trends , Adult
3.
Acad Med ; 96(11): 1507-1512, 2021 11 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34432719

ABSTRACT

The harsh realities of racial inequities related to COVID-19 and civil unrest following police killings of unarmed Black men and women in the United States in 2020 heightened awareness of racial injustices around the world. Racism is deeply embedded in academic medicine, yet the nobility of medicine and nursing has helped health care professionals distance themselves from racism. Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC), like many U.S. academic medical centers, affirmed its commitment to racial equity in summer 2020. A Racial Equity Task Force was charged with identifying barriers to achieving racial equity at the medical center and medical school and recommending key actions to rectify long-standing racial inequities. The task force, composed of students, staff, and faculty, produced more than 60 recommendations, and its work brought to light critical areas that need to be addressed in academic medicine broadly. To dismantle structural racism, academic medicine must: (1) confront medicine's racist past, which has embedded racial inequities in the U.S. health care system; (2) develop and require health care professionals to possess core competencies in the health impacts of structural racism; (3) recognize race as a sociocultural and political construct, and commit to debiologizing its use; (4) invest in benefits and resources for health care workers in lower-paid roles, in which racial and ethnic minorities are often overrepresented; and (5) commit to antiracism at all levels, including changing institutional policies, starting at the executive leadership level with a vision, metrics, and accountability.


Subject(s)
Academic Medical Centers/ethics , COVID-19/ethnology , Minority Groups/statistics & numerical data , Racism/ethnology , Schools, Medical/statistics & numerical data , Academic Medical Centers/organization & administration , Black or African American/ethnology , COVID-19/diagnosis , COVID-19/epidemiology , COVID-19/virology , Delivery of Health Care/ethics , Female , Health Personnel/ethics , Humans , Male , SARS-CoV-2/genetics , Schools, Medical/ethics , United States/epidemiology
4.
Am J Surg ; 221(2): 270-276, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32943180

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Surgical educators' professional behavior constitutes a hidden curriculum and impacts trainee's professional identity formation. This study explores the nuances of professional behaviors as observed in varying surgical settings. METHODS: 411 Transcripts originated from essays written by MS3 students during their surgical clerkship from 2010 to 2016 were collated. Employing a qualitative research methodology, we conducted a thematic analysis to uncover specific meaning emerging from medical student reflections' on surgical professionalism. RESULTS: In clinics, taking time and protecting patient privacy; in the OR, control over emotion during difficult situations and attention to learners; and in the inpatient setting, showing accountability above normal expected behavior were noted as professional. Similarly, unprofessional behaviors in these contexts paralleled lack of these attributes. CONCLUSIONS: Behaviors observed and the attributes of professionalism in the surgical learning environment have contextual nuances. These variations in professionalism can be utilized in deliberate development of professionalism in surgery.


Subject(s)
Clinical Clerkship/ethics , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/ethics , Professionalism , Students, Medical/statistics & numerical data , Surgeons/ethics , Attitude of Health Personnel , Clinical Clerkship/statistics & numerical data , Curriculum , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/methods , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, University/ethics , Hospitals, University/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Qualitative Research , Schools, Medical/ethics , Schools, Medical/statistics & numerical data
6.
Tex Med ; 116(8): 34, 2020 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32866275

ABSTRACT

Medical schools typically have predictable schedules. The timing of lectures, clerkships, exams, and even extracurricular activities tend to follow in the same grooves year after year. Students can reliably block out even minor events months ahead of time and be confident they'll take place. All that changed with COVID-19. Since March, when the pandemic began closing down schools, businesses, and other institutions across the state, figuring out what comes next in medical school has been anything but predictable.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/organization & administration , Coronavirus Infections , Pandemics , Pneumonia, Viral , Schools, Medical , Stress, Psychological/etiology , Students, Medical/psychology , Betacoronavirus , Burnout, Psychological/psychology , COVID-19 , Clinical Competence , Coronavirus Infections/epidemiology , Coronavirus Infections/prevention & control , Disease Transmission, Infectious/prevention & control , Humans , Organizational Innovation , Pandemics/prevention & control , Pneumonia, Viral/epidemiology , Pneumonia, Viral/prevention & control , SARS-CoV-2 , Schools, Medical/ethics , Schools, Medical/organization & administration , Schools, Medical/trends , Teaching/ethics , Teaching/psychology , Texas/epidemiology , Uncertainty
7.
J Surg Res ; 252: 281-284, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32439143

ABSTRACT

Mistreatment has been documented as a negative factor in the learning environment for the past 30 y but little progress has been made to determine an effective way to significantly improve these interactions. Faculty may also be victims of a hostile work environment as well, although frequency has not been well-measured or reported. In fact, it may be difficult to identify and address mistreatment and hostility in the work place within the commonly established surgical culture. Thus, efforts to define, identify, and address workplace mistreatment or hostility are crucial to the success of the academic surgical environment. This article summarizes presentations and panel discussion that took place at the 2019 Academic Surgical Congress organized by the Association for Academic Surgery and the Society of University Surgeons. Definitions of mistreatment and hostility were provided, as well as information regarding occurrence. Tools for addressing mistreatment in the work environment and tips for creating a positive environment were presented and discussed.


Subject(s)
Faculty, Medical/psychology , General Surgery/education , Hostility , Surgeons/psychology , Workplace/psychology , Academic Medical Centers/ethics , Ethics, Professional , Learning , Schools, Medical/ethics , Students, Medical/psychology , Surgeons/education , Universities/ethics
11.
Rev. cient. Esc. Univ. Cienc. Salud ; 6(2): 61-72, jun.-dic. 2019.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-1118338

ABSTRACT

La evolución de la educación médica en América tiene un momento clave en la historia, definido con el estudio de las escuelas de medicina de Estados Unidos y Canadá realizado por Abraham Flexner en 1910, el cual dividió en su momento a la educación médica en una etapa pre-flexneriana y post-flexneriana. Este estudio caracterizó al sistema educativo médico en Estados Unidos como un sistema deficiente, carente de regulación y sin estándares establecidos. La medicina, enseñada y ejercida con pocos principios científicos representaba un importante problema de salud y seguridad poblacional. Ante este panorama, la Asociación Americana de Medicina decide promover una evaluación de la mayoría de las escuelas de medicina con el fin de proponer cambios en el sistema educativo médico. Flexner, un teórico educativo, realiza el análisis curricular, de evaluación y prácticas ejercidas en 155 centros educativos. De su reporte se desprende la propuesta conocida como Revolución Flexneriana la cual hace tambalear el sistema educativo médico en Norteamérica en 1910. Enfatizando falta de estandarización, integración, investigación y deficiencia de la formación de médicos con identidad profesional, Flexner propuso cambios que en su momento llegaron a regir la enseñanza de los médicos en Norteamérica. Se realizó una revisión bibliográfica utilizando búsqueda manual en PubMed y Google Scholar para hacer descripcion de los aspectos históricos de la educación médica en Norteamérica, su influencia en Latinoamérica y la prevalencia actual de la integración curricular en muchas escuelas de medicina...(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Education, Medical/history , Educational Measurement , Schools, Medical/ethics , Students, Medical/history
12.
Am J Med Sci ; 358(5): 317-325, 2019 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31655713

ABSTRACT

At the end of World War II anti-Semitism was pervasive in the United States. Quotas to limit the number of Jewish students were put in place at most U.S. medical schools in the 1920s and were well-entrenched by 1945. By 1970 the quota was gone. Why? Multiple factors contributed to the end of the quota. First, attitudes toward Jews shifted as Americans recoiled from the horrors of the Holocaust and over half a million Jewish GIs returned home from World War II. Many entered the higher education system. Second, governmental and private investigations in New York City, New York State and Philadelphia exposed the quota. Third, New York State, led by Governor Thomas E. Dewey, established 4 publicly supported nondiscriminatory medical schools. These schools adsorbed many New York Jewish applicants. Fourth, from the 1920s through the 1960s some medical schools consistently or intermittently ignored the quota. Finally, the federal and several state governments passed nondiscrimination in higher education legislation. The quotas ended because of a combination of changing societal attitudes and government and private social action. This remarkable social change may be instructive as higher education now grapples with allegations of a quota system for Asian-Americans.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical , Jews/education , Prejudice , Schools, Medical , Asian/education , Education, Medical/ethics , Education, Medical/history , Education, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , Humans , Prejudice/history , Prejudice/legislation & jurisprudence , Schools, Medical/ethics , Schools, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Schools, Medical/organization & administration , United States
13.
AMA J Ethics ; 21(9): E742-748, 2019 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31550221

ABSTRACT

Short-term experiences in global health (STEGHs) are common ways trainees engage in global health activities, which can be viewed by students as either altruistic or opportunistic. This article explores how STEGHs express the social contract medicine has with society, emphasizes areas of breakdown in this social contract, and calls for medical schools, licensure boards, STEGH-sponsoring organizations, and professional societies to take active roles in addressing these ethical challenges.


Subject(s)
Global Health/education , International Educational Exchange , Social Responsibility , Curriculum , Global Health/ethics , Humans , Schools, Medical/ethics , Schools, Medical/organization & administration
14.
AMA J Ethics ; 21(9): E772-777, 2019 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31550225

ABSTRACT

In the past decade, more students than ever entered medical school with the desire, if not the expectation, of participating in meaningful global health experiences. Schools must now weigh benefits to students of global experiences against burdens of students' learning experiences on institutions and individuals with whom schools partner. Most often, global health training is done as offsite immersion rotations in research or clinical settings. This article explores ethical dimensions of expanding global health offerings while respecting local partners' goals by focusing on the experience of the University of Pennsylvania's global health training programs.


Subject(s)
Global Health/education , International Educational Exchange , Schools, Medical/organization & administration , Global Health/ethics , Humans , Madagascar , Pennsylvania , Schools, Medical/ethics , Students, Medical , United States
15.
Anat Sci Educ ; 12(4): 399-406, 2019 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31038285

ABSTRACT

The University of Oklahoma College of Medicine has conducted an annual Anatomical Donor Luncheon where families of the anatomical donors met anatomy dissection groups of medical students. The luncheon presented an opportunity for donor family members to share the life story of their loved one with the medical students prior to the start of the anatomy course. This study was designed to understand the impact of the Anatomical Donor Luncheon on families of the donors. Seven families in two different focus groups were included to explore the reactions and attitudes of the donor families to meeting the medical students. Conversations were digitally recorded and transcribed. Qualitative analysis of textual data were coded by three investigators using the Constant Comparative Method. To provide evidence of validity, a form of member checking was utilized. For further triangulation, an analyst not involved in conducting the focus groups or analyzing the data, re-coded all data. This analyst used categories and themes identified by the original analysts, ensuring validity of the themes and any negative cases (data not supporting or contradictory of the established categories and themes). One meta-theme and three sub-themes were identified. The meta-theme was Donor Family Participants Experience Transformation and Closure, and sub-themes were Motivators for Participation, Optimal Venue Factors, and Optimal Medical Student-Anatomical Donor Family Interactions. Study findings indicated the Anatomical Donor Luncheon facilitated closure on the death of their loved one, and transformed their apprehension about the luncheon and body donation into an attitude of gratitude and appreciation.


Subject(s)
Anatomy/education , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/ethics , Family/psychology , Students, Medical/psychology , Tissue Donors/ethics , Anatomy/ethics , Attitude to Death , Cadaver , Dissection/ethics , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/organization & administration , Focus Groups , Humanism , Humans , Qualitative Research , Schools, Medical/ethics , Schools, Medical/organization & administration , Surveys and Questionnaires , Universities/ethics , Universities/organization & administration
16.
Ann Anat ; 225: 11-16, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31125600

ABSTRACT

"Mortui vivos docent". Learning from donated bodies is widely considered a corner stone in pre-clinical education, advanced clinical training, and scientific progress in medicine. Making such use of dead human bodies must, of course, accord with high ethical standards and legal constraints. Piety and respect towards donors require using their remains (i) for valuable purposes, (ii) with what we call 'practical decency', (iii) in an efficient way, and (iv) with the utmost safety for all parties involved. With regard to these goals, practical aspects of preservation, safekeeping procedures (for up to several years), and complete documentation become of great importance, but have so far only been realized unsatisfactorily. Here, we describe the new Safe-Keeping System-Münster (SKS-Münster) that has been developed and implemented in the Anatomy Department of the University of Münster. Integrated components of the system include a paternoster transport system, a removal station with ventilation and an air barrier, RFID transponder technology, and an easy to use software package allowing the system together to provide all required functions in an unprecedented way.


Subject(s)
Cadaver , Dissection/ethics , Dissection/standards , Preservation, Biological/ethics , Preservation, Biological/standards , Tissue and Organ Procurement/standards , Anatomy/education , Cryopreservation/ethics , Cryopreservation/standards , Education, Medical/ethics , Education, Medical/standards , Embalming/ethics , Embalming/standards , Germany , Humans , Pathology/education , Safety , Schools, Medical/ethics , Schools, Medical/standards , Students, Medical , Tissue and Organ Procurement/ethics , Tissue and Organ Procurement/legislation & jurisprudence
17.
PLoS One ; 14(5): e0217717, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31141551

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Several lines of evidence indicate that medical schools have been failing to adequately nurture empathy and the ethical dimension in their graduates, the lack of which may play a central role in the genesis of medical errors, itself a major source of avoidable deaths, incapacity and wasted resources. It has been widely proposed that medical schools should adopt evaluation strategies as a means to promote a culture of respectful relationships. However, it is not clear if evaluation strategies in medical schools have addressed key domains related to that aim, such as ethics, through the perspective of their students. Hence, we conducted a national survey of instruments used by Brazilian medical schools to assess clerkship rotations from the perspective of students, with a main focus on the ethical domain. METHODS: The authors invited 121 randomly selected institutions to participate in the study. Key informants answered a questionnaire about clerkship rotations and sent copies of any instrument used to assess the quality of clerkship rotations according to the students' perspectives. RESULTS: Twenty-six (53%) of 49 participating schools used an instrument to assess the quality of clerkship rotations according to the perspective of students. Just 13 (27%) schools had instruments containing at least one question encompassing the ethical domain. Only 2 (4%) schools asked students specifically about the occurrence of any negative experience concerning the ethical domain during rotations. Merely 1 (2%) school asked students about having witnessed patient mistreatment and none asked about mistreatment against students themselves. CONCLUSIONS: There are several missed opportunities in the way medical schools assess the quality of clerkship rotations regarding the ethical domain. Closing the gap between usual institutional discourses regarding ethics and how that dimension is assessed within clerkship rotations might represent an important step towards the improvement of medical education and healthcare systems.


Subject(s)
Clinical Clerkship/ethics , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/ethics , Schools, Medical/ethics , Brazil/epidemiology , Education, Medical , Humans , Students, Medical
18.
Acad Med ; 94(8): 1229-1236, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30870149

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Values and value systems are fundamental to medical school admissions processes. An axiological analysis was carried out to explore the individual values and value systems found within the University of Calgary's Cumming School of Medicine's undergraduate admissions process. METHOD: A mixed-methods case study methodology was developed with a focus on applicant characteristics viewed as desirable, the relative value ascribed to applicant characteristics, the values that participants in admissions processes brought to bear, the values that were reflected in the artifacts and procedures used in support of admissions processes, and the values that were expressed at a system, program, or institutional level. The study employed a descriptive audit of admissions processes, a stakeholder survey, stakeholder interviews, and a discourse analysis of admissions materials (all carried out between June and September 2017). RESULTS: The study found that, despite a general sense of satisfaction with the rigor of the admissions process, there was less satisfaction with the final selection it produced. Participants wanted to see more attention paid to responsibilities to patients and society than to gender and ethnic balance. CONCLUSIONS: Those involved with medical school admissions need to be mindful of their value systems and use them to align intent with process and outcomes in selecting tomorrow's physicians. Axiological analysis of medical education processes can play a central role in reviewing and refocusing efforts on meeting an institution's social mission and medical education's social contract.


Subject(s)
School Admission Criteria , Schools, Medical/ethics , Social Values , Students, Medical/psychology , Adult , Alberta , Female , Humans , Male
19.
Anat Sci Educ ; 12(4): 349-359, 2019 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30739388

ABSTRACT

Medical schools are increasingly integrating professionalism training into their gross anatomy courses, teaching ethical behavior and humanistic attitudes through the dissection experience. However, many schools continue to take a traditional, technical approach to anatomical education while teaching professionalism in separate courses. This interview-based study explored how students viewed the body donor and the professional lessons they learned through dissection at one such medical school. All students oscillated involuntarily between seeing the cadaver as a specimen for learning and seeing the cadaver as a person, with some students intentionally cultivating one of these ways of seeing over the other. These views shaped students' emotional and moral responses to the experiences of dissection. The "specimen" view facilitated a technical, detached approach to dissection, while the "person" view made students engage emotionally. Further, students who intentionally cultivated a "specimen" view generally felt less moral distress about dissection than students who intentionally cultivated a "person" view. The concept of respect gave students permission to perform dissections, but "person-minded" students developed more complex rules around what constituted respectful behavior. Both groups of students connected the gross anatomy experience to their professional development, but in different ways. "Specimen-minded" students intentionally objectified the body to learn the emotional control physicians need, while "person-minded" students humanized the body donor to promote the emotional engagement required of physicians. These findings support efforts to integrate professionalism teaching into gross anatomy courses, particularly content, addressing the balance between professional detachment and concern.


Subject(s)
Anatomy/education , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/ethics , Emotions , Professionalism/ethics , Students, Medical/psychology , Anatomy/ethics , Curriculum , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/methods , Female , Humanism , Humans , Laboratories/ethics , Male , Professionalism/education , Qualitative Research , Schools, Medical/ethics
20.
Acad Med ; 94(8): 1211-1219, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30730368

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To describe the admissions process and outcomes for Indigenous applicants to the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM), a Canadian medical school with the mandate to recruit students whose demographics reflect the service region's population. METHOD: The authors examined 10-year trends (2006-2015) for self-identified Indigenous applicants through major admission stages. Demographics (age, sex, northern and rural backgrounds) and admission scores (grade point average [GPA], preinterview, multiple mini-interview [MMI], final), along with score-based ranks, of Indigenous and non-Indigenous applicants were compared using Pearson chi-square and Mann-Whitney tests. Binary logistic regression was used to assess the relationship between Indigenous status and likelihood of admission outcomes (interviewed, received offer, admitted). RESULTS: Indigenous qualified applicants (338/17,060; 2.0%) were more likely to be female, mature (25 or older), or of northern or rural background than non-Indigenous applicants. They had lower GPA-based ranks than non-Indigenous applicants (P < .001) but had comparable preinterview-, MMI-, and final-score-based ranks across all admission stages. Indigenous applicants were 2.4 times more likely to be interviewed and 2.5 times more likely to receive an admission offer, but 3 times less likely to accept an offer than non-Indigenous applicants. Overall, 41/338 (12.1%) Indigenous qualified applicants were admitted compared with 569/16,722 (3.4%) non-Indigenous qualified applicants. CONCLUSIONS: Increased representation of Indigenous peoples among applicants admitted to medical school can be achieved through the use of socially accountable admissions. Further tracking of Indigenous students through medical education and practice may help assess the effectiveness of NOSM's social accountability admissions process.


Subject(s)
Indigenous Peoples/statistics & numerical data , School Admission Criteria/trends , Schools, Medical/statistics & numerical data , Social Responsibility , Adult , Chi-Square Distribution , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Male , Ontario , Schools, Medical/ethics , Statistics, Nonparametric
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