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Lutsky, Larry A.; And Others – Evaluation Review, 1993
Reliability and accuracy of peer ratings by 32, 28, 33 general surgery residents over 3 years were examined. Peer ratings were found highly reliable, with high level of test-retest reliability replicated across three years. Halo effects appear to pose greatest threat to rater accuracy, though chief residents tended to exhibit less halo effect than…
Descriptors: Graduate Medical Students, Higher Education, Peer Evaluation, Student Evaluation
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Dunnington, Gary L. – Teaching and Learning in Medicine, 1990
Third year medical students (n=26) participated in a pilot program of an entirely outpatient multispecialty clinic experience. Overall, 61 percent of outpatient encounters involved a surgical diagnosis currently managed entirely on an outpatient basis, illustrating the importance of this setting in broad student exposure to surgery and surgical…
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Clinics, Educational Environment, Higher Education
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Iversen, Maura D.; Daltroy, Lawren H.; Fossel, Anne H.; Katz, Jeffrey N. – Patient Education and Counseling, 1998
Examines patients (N=257) with lumbar spinal stenosis preoperatively and at six months to relate patient expectation to baseline function and pain and to determine how patient expectations and preoperative function interact to predict postoperative outcomes. Results show that patients with many preoperative expectations, particularly those with…
Descriptors: Expectation, Outcomes of Treatment, Pain, Patients
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Tanner, Judith – Nurse Education Today, 2000
An ethnographic study compared content of a surgical nursing course developed by an individual with content determined through observation of practice. Most content was relevant to practice. However, sociology had a significant influence on practice but it was not addressed in curriculum. Ways to improve course development were recommended. (SK)
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Course Content, Curriculum Development, Higher Education
Mangan, Katherine A. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2000
Reports on the increasing use of virtual-reality devices at Pennsylvania State University's Milton S. Hershey Medical Center and other institutions that allow medical residents to practice their skills in simulated operations. Notes that both students and professors are enthusiastic about the simulations but that the necessary technology and…
Descriptors: Educational Media, Higher Education, Medical Education, Simulation
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Jordan, John W. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2004
This essay analyzes the "plastic body" as it is produced in the discourse of plastic surgery. The contemporary industry has constructed a popular image of plastic surgery as a readily available and personally empowering means to resolve body image issues, on the presumption that any body can become a "better" body. The ideology underlying the…
Descriptors: Rhetorical Invention, Rhetoric, Self Concept, Surgery
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Wright, Frances C.; Ryan, David P.; Dodge, Jason E.; Last, Linda D.; Law, Calvin H. L.; Smith, Andrew J. – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2004
Introduction: Educationally influential physicians (EIPs) are identified by their colleagues as people who (1) encourage learning and enjoy sharing their knowledge, (2) are clinical experts and always seem up to date, and (3) treat others as equals. We aimed to identify surgical and pathologist EIPs for colorectal cancer (CRC) in Ontario as part…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Transfer Programs, Surgery, Physicians
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Petersen, Jennifer – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 2004
The era of technical and scientific progress ushered in with the twentieth century brought new medical knowledge such as the Halstead 'radical' mastectomy, which promised a cure for breast cancer. These advances in medical knowledge were premised on an epidemiological model of disease, which shaped the treatment and public understanding of breast…
Descriptors: Females, Public Health, Preventive Medicine, Cancer
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Watson, Linda M.; Gregory, Susan – Deafness and Education International, 2005
Five cases of non-use of cochlear implants by children were investigated through semi-structured interviews with the children and their carers. The children were interviewed at school by a researcher who is deaf, and the carers, all of whom were hearing, were interviewed at home by a hearing researcher when the children were not present. The…
Descriptors: Assistive Technology, Deafness, Hearing Impairments, Interviews
Duchowny, Michael S.; Dean, Patricia – Exceptional Parent, 2006
Nearly 1 out of 2 children and teens with seizures may need to take medications throughout their lives. At least 25% will develop a condition called refractory epilepsy--meaning that their seizures do not respond to medical therapy. For these children and teens, non-drug therapies such as brain surgery are available that may offer a chance to…
Descriptors: Brain, Surgery, Seizures, Quality of Life
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Doty, Brit Cruse; Heneghan, Steven; Zuckerman, Randall – Journal of Rural Health, 2007
Context: Surgical services are frequently unavailable in rural American communities. Therefore, rural residents often must travel long distances to receive surgical care. Rural hospitals commonly have difficulty providing surgical services despite potential economic benefits. Purpose: The purpose of this project was to identify the key challenges…
Descriptors: Surgery, Cooperation, Hospitals, Focus Groups
McDonald, Eugene T.; Berlin, Asa J. – 1980
The booklet, written in Spanish, is intended to help parents of babies with cleft lip and/or cleft palate. Topics covered include the sequence of prenatal development and the effects of birth defects, common misconceptions about what causes the conditions, possible hereditary and environmental causes, and what it means to have a cleft palate or a…
Descriptors: Cleft Palate, Etiology, Infants, Medical Services
Bates, Clarice; And Others – 1977
Text, illustrations, and exercises are utilized in a set of five learning modules designed to instruct nursing students in a variety of clinical skills. The first module, "Down the Tube: Insertion of a Nasogastric Tube" by Clarice Bates, describes materials and procedures used to insert a nasogastric tube through the nose and esophagus…
Descriptors: Biomedical Equipment, Equipment Utilization, Learning Modules, Nursing
Waite, Frederick C. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1925
Dentistry has evolved from medicine and more especially from the surgical aspect of what is now called medicine. Until the sixteenth century, physic and surgery were separate professions and what we now call dentistry was a part of surgery rather than of physic. For centuries physic was a calling of greater dignity than surgery. Since the major…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Surgery, Apprenticeships, Foreign Countries
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Hurwitz, Roger A. – Journal of Pediatrics, 1973
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Exceptional Child Research, Heart Disorders
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