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  1. Engaging Tomorrow’s Doctors in Clinical Ethics: Implications for Healthcare Organisations.Laura L. Machin & Robin D. Proctor - 2020 - Health Care Analysis 29 (4):319-342.
    Clinical ethics can be viewed as a practical discipline that provides a structured approach to assist healthcare practitioners in identifying, analysing and resolving ethical issues that arise in practice. Clinical ethics can therefore promote ethically sound clinical and organisational practices and decision-making, thereby contributing to health organisation and system quality improvement. In order to develop students’ decision-making skills, as well as prepare them for practice, we decided to introduce a clinical ethics strand within an undergraduate medical curriculum. We designed a (...)
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  • To Determine the Effectiveness of Current Ethical Teachings in Medical Students and Ways to Reform this Aspect.Rida Saleem, Syeda Zainab Fatima, Roha Shafaut, Asifa Maqbool, Faiza Zakaria, Saba Zaheer, Musfirah Danyal Barry, Haris Jawaid & Dr Fauzia Imtiaz - forthcoming - Journal of Academic Ethics:1-9.
    To determine the effectiveness of current ethical teaching and to suggest ways to reform the current ethical curriculum in light of students’ perspectives and experiences. Students of Dow Medical College were selected for this cross-sectional study conducted between the year 2020 till 2023. The sample size was 387, calculated by OpenEpi. A questionnaire consisting of 17 close-ended questions was used to collect data from participants selected via stratified random sampling. The questionnaire consisted of two parts. The first part included the (...)
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  • Investigating Medical Students’ Navigation of Ethical Dilemmas: Understanding the Breakdown and How to Solve It.Adam J. Wesevich, Lauren E. Gulbas & Hilary F. Ryder - 2023 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 14 (4):227-236.
    Purpose Medical students receive a varying amount of training in medical ethics and are expected to navigate clinical ethical dilemmas innately. There is little literature on attempts to navigate ethical dilemmas experienced during early clinical experiences and whether current curricula prepare students for these dilemmas. This study explores the different ethical dilemmas experienced by medical students on their third-year clerkships and analyzes the factors, sources, and resolutions proposed by them.Methods From 2016 to 2018, third-year medical students completed a written assignment (...)
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  • Ethics knowledge of recent paediatric residency graduates: the role of residency ethics curricula.Jennifer C. Kesselheim, Julie Najita, Debra Morley, Elizabeth Bair & Steven Joffe - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (12):809-814.
    ObjectiveTo evaluate the relationship between recently trained paediatricians' ethics knowledge and exposure to a formal ethics or professionalism curriculum during residency.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional survey of recently trained paediatricians which included a validated 23-item instrument called the Test of Residents' Ethics Knowledge for Pediatrics. The sample included paediatricians who completed medical school in 2006–2008, whose primary specialty was paediatrics or a paediatric subspecialty, and who completed paediatric residency training in 2010–2011. This sample was stratified based on residency programme variables: presence (...)
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  • The overlapping spheres of medical professionalism and medical ethics: a conceptual inquiry.Claudia W. Ruitenberg - 2016 - Ethics and Education 11 (1):79-90.
    This essay examines the concepts of ‘professionalism’ and ‘ethics’ as they are used in health professions education and, in particular, medical education. It proposes that, in order to make sense of the construct of ‘professional ethics,’ it would be helpful to conceive of professionalism and ethics as overlapping but not identical spheres. By allowing for areas of professionalism that are not directly pertinent to ethics, and areas of ethics that are not directly pertinent to the professional sphere, ‘professional ethics’ as (...)
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  • What is it to do good medical ethics? Minding the gap(s).Deborah Bowman - 2015 - Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (1):60-63.
    This paper discusses the character of medical ethics and suggests that there are significant gaps that warrant greater attention. It describes ways in which the content and form of medical ethics may exclude or marginalise perspectives and contributions, thereby reducing its influence and its potential impact on, and value to, patients, students, carers and society. To consider what it is ‘to do good medical ethics’ suggests an active approach that seeks out, and learns from, contributions beyond the traditional boundaries of (...)
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  • Moving beyond the theoretical: Medical students’ desire for practical, role-specific ethics training.Shana D. Stites, Justin Clapp, Stefanie Gallagher & Autumn Fiester - 2018 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 9 (3):154-163.
    Background: It has been widely reported that medical trainees experience situations with profound ethical implications during their clinical rotations. To address this, most U.S. medical schools include ethics curricula in their undergraduate programs. However, the contents of these curricula vary substantially. Our pilot study aimed to discover, from the students’ perspective, how ethics pedagogy prepares medical students for clerkship and what gaps might remain. Methods: This qualitative study organized focus groups of third- and fourth-year medical students. Participants recounted ethical concerns (...)
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  • Undergraduate healthcare ethics education, moral resilience, and the role of ethical theories.Settimio Monteverde - 2014 - Nursing Ethics 21 (4):385-401.
    Background: This article combines foundational and empirical aspects of healthcare education and develops a framework for teaching ethical theories inspired by pragmatist learning theory and recent work on the concept of moral resilience. It describes an exemplary implementation and presents data from student evaluation. Objectives: After a pilot implementation in a regular ethics module, the feasibility and acceptance of the novel framework by students were evaluated. Research design: In addition to the regular online module evaluation, specific questions referring to the (...)
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  • Caring for tomorrow’s workforce.Settimio Monteverde - 2016 - Nursing Ethics 23 (1):104-116.
    Background: Preparing tomorrow’s healthcare workforce for managing the growing complexity of care places high demands on students, educators, and faculties. In the light of worrying data about study-related stress and burnout, understanding how students manage stressors and develop resilience has been identified as a priority topic of research. In addition to study-related stressors, also moral stressors are known to characterize the students’ first clinical experiences. Objectives: However, current debates show that it remains unclear how healthcare ethics education should address them. (...)
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