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Levitt, Cheryl; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1994
A survey of 319 residents, recent graduates, and faculty of McGill University medical school investigated which ethical issues were viewed as important to include in the curriculum, frequency of occurrence, difficulty of management, and helpfulness of discussion. Gender differences were also studied. Results indicate little consensus on ethics…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Techniques, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Course Content

Nicolette, JoDean; Jacobs, Michael D. – Academic Medicine, 2000
Describes a collaboration to analyze and integrate elements of women's health into the core curriculum in internal medicine for a medical school's third year clerkship. Illustrates the new curriculum by describing the new module in pulmonary medicine and discusses the use of the process to integrate curricula in other interdisciplinary fields.…
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Development, Females, Gender Issues

Magrane, Diane; Ephgrave, Kimberly; Jacobs, Michael; Rusch, Roberta – Academic Medicine, 2000
Describes three approaches to designing and implementing women's health curricula: (1) adding courses to existing curricula; (2) delegating parts of the curriculum to existing courses; and (3) creating new interdisciplinary curricula. Discusses how each might be applied to the topic of domestic violence. Emphasizes the importance of collaborative…
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Development, Females, Gender Issues

Pellegrino, Edmund D. – Academic Medicine, 1989
Issues in the inclusion of medical ethics in the medical curriculum are discussed, including its relevance, whether or not ethics can be taught, whose ethics should be taught, the contribution of the professional ethicist, and the relevance of humanistic studies outside ethics. (MSE)
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Development, Educational Strategies, Ethical Instruction

Ales, Kathy L.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1992
This report describes the development and implementation of a required course in medical ethics for second-year medical students at Cornell University Medical College (New York). The planning model stressed achieving faculty consensus. Evaluation indicated that faculty felt the planning sessions added greatly to their teaching and students were…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Course Content, Course Evaluation, Curriculum Development

Cohen, Andrew J. – Academic Medicine, 1998
Patients with chronic illness account for three-fourths of United States' health-care expenditures, and considerable growth in these costs is likely as the population ages. However, management of chronic illness has received little attention in either undergraduate or graduate medical education. Competencies required to develop curricula in…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Chronic Illness, Course Content, Curriculum Development

Fox, Ellen; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1995
This article reviews the 25-year history of undergraduate medical ethics education. Alternatives to the traditional model that focus more directly on students' personal values, attitudes, and behavior, are discussed. Three incipient trends are identified: everyday ethics, student ethics, and macro-ethics. Specific course and curricula are used as…
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Decision Making

Fleming, Michael; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1994
A 1992 survey of 6 clinical departments in 126 medical schools investigated the status of substance abuse education and number of faculty teaching it. Results were compared with baseline data from two previous surveys and additional studies. Findings indicate positive changes but not comparable to education for other prevalent clinical problems.…
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Trends

Puchalski, Christina M.; Larson, David B. – Academic Medicine, 1998
Discusses one approach to achieving compassionate medical caregiving, the study of spirituality and medicine. Examines the relationship between spirituality and healing and describes studies indicating that patients want to have spiritual issues addressed by their physicians, and noting potential health benefits of spiritual beliefs. Outlines…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Beliefs, Course Content, Curriculum Development

Reiser, Stanley Joel; Heitman, Elizabeth – Academic Medicine, 1993
A University of Texas-Houston course on ethics in the biological sciences is described. The course focuses on two central values: truthfulness and benefit to others. Issues in course development are discussed, including gaining faculty support, selecting instructors, constructing a syllabus, using cases, and reducing cultural bias in tests.…
Descriptors: Biology, Case Studies, College Faculty, Course Content

Academic Medicine, 1996
The American Medical Student Association's Nutrition Curriculum Project assembled a 10-member advisory board to develop a comprehensive list of nutrition topics deemed essential for the adequate training of physicians. The resulting 92 topics are divided into 5 major categories: (1) biochemistry/physiology/pathophysiology; (2) nutrition…
Descriptors: Advisory Committees, Biochemistry, Change Strategies, Clinical Diagnosis

Short, Lynn M.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1997
Evaluation of a Domestic Violence Module taught in the University of California, Los Angeles medical school found it to be innovative, well planned, and well received by both students and faculty. Areas identified for improvement included opportunities for students to practice skills and receive feedback, consistency in content across classes, and…
Descriptors: Course Content, Course Evaluation, Course Organization, Curriculum Development

Fang, Wei Li; Applegate, Steven N.; Stein, Roy M.; Lohr, Jacob A. – Academic Medicine, 1998
In 1992, the four medical schools in North Carolina and the state's dental school initiated a four-year project to more thoroughly integrate content about substance abuse into their curricula. The processes by which key faculty, administrators, and staff from all schools worked together, with each school tailoring the project's findings to its own…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Course Content, Curriculum Development, Dental Schools

Slavin, Stuart J.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1995
A year-long third-year medical school course at the University of California, Los Angeles, integrates underrepresented topics into the clinical curriculum. One day every two weeks, students visit community-based clinical sites and engage in small-group sessions, following and managing simulated patients during the year and examining the…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Clinical Experience, Clinical Teaching (Health Professions), Course Content

Reynolds, P. Preston; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1995
A survey of 272 medical school chief residents concerning proposed revisions of internal medicine residency requirements found the most strongly supported changes were: enhanced training in interviewing, interpersonal, and physical examination skills; increased emphasis on residency as an educational experience and on general internal medicine in…
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Communication Skills, Course Content, Curriculum Design