레이블이 Care Learning Training and Education인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 Care Learning Training and Education인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 11월 27일 수요일

About 'health care education and training'|health care education and training







About 'health care education and training'|health care education and training








The               22-year-old               who               shows               up               for               medical               school               expecting               most               classes               to               be               a               lot               like               they               were               even               five               years               ago               is               in               for               a               big               shock.

Health               reform               has               caused               most               of               these               institutions               to               revamp               their               curricula.

At               George               Washington               University's               medical               school               in               Washington,               DC,               for               example,               third-year               students               recently               ventured               to               Capitol               Hill               to               observe               a               debate               on               the               changing               American               health               care               system.

According               to               the               Washington               Post,               reality               is               now               the               basis               of               medical               school               education.
               At               Georgetown               University               Medical               School,               beginning               students               take               classes               in               how               to               communicate               with               patients               and               in               social               and               cultural               issues               in               health               care               before               dissecting               any               cadavers.

The               standard               anatomy               class               is               gone.

Johns               Hopkins'               medical               school               has               just               completed               a               major               rehab               of               its               curriculum               in               response               to               a               growing               demand               for               medicine               that's               more               personalized               than               it               was               even               a               few               years               ago.
               For               medical               students               who               are               the               children               of               physicians,               adjusting               expectations               can               be               difficult.

They               arrived               on               campus               with               a               view               of               medicine               shaped               by               family               experience.
               In               the               midst               of               reforms,               medical               schools               across               the               country               are               scrambling               to               keep               pace               with               anticipated               changes               in               health               care.

They're               trying               to               produce               doctors               who               know               traditional               care               but               who               will               also               use               techniques               of               holistic               and               alternative               medicine.

Primary               care               doctors               will               be               in               huge               demand,               and               how               the               reformed               health               care               system               will               pay               for               them               and               other               physicians               is               anybody's               guess               at               this               point.
               According               to               the               Association               of               American               Medical               Colleges,               which               compiles               information               about               training               from               130               medical               schools,               these               institutions               are               attempting               to               train               doctors               not               just               for               the               short               term,               but               for               20               or               30               years.

At               some               schools,               joint               committees               of               students               and               doctors               make               up               task               forces               charged               with               overhauling               the               curricula.

A               lot               of               class               material               is               now               based               on               case               studies               in               order               to               teach               students               to               manage               the               patient               as               a               whole               person,               not               just               a               disease               or               complaint.
               Johns               Hopkins'               revised               curriculum               has               been               dubbed               "Genes               to               Society."               Its               goal               is               to               teach               students               to               analyze               all               genetic,               environmental               and               socio-economic               influences               on               a               patient's               situation.

One               driving               force               in               its               development               was               the               anticipation               of               a               Democratic               Administration               and               major               initiatives               for               health               care               reform               as               a               result.
               Even               schools               that               haven't               restructured               training               for               their               medical               students               have               introduced               smaller               changes.

At               Howard               University's               College               of               Medicine,               plans               are               afoot               to               implement               less               of               an               emphasis               on               lectures               and               more               on               small-group               learning               to               leave               behind               textbook-style               learning.

The               school               is               also               trying               to               attract               medical               students               from               areas               where               the               need               is               the               greatest               and               offers               them               scholarships               and               loans.
               Overall,               the               medical               community               is               concerned               that               so               few               students               want               to               go               into               primary               care,               which               is               the               field               best               aligned               with               the               new               curricula.

Primary               care               today               is               an               umbrella               for               internal               medicine,               pediatrics               and               obstetrics/gynecology.
               While               less               than               two               generations               ago,               around               half               of               U.S.

doctors               were               primary               care               physicians,               the               number               has               shrunk               to               a               third.

Only               one               out               of               ever               five               current               medical               students               plans               to               do               so.






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