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Survey of current status of intensive care teaching in English-speaking medical schools

 

作者: Judith Shen,   Gavin Joynt,   Lester Critchley,   Ian Tan,   Anna Lee,  

 

期刊: Critical Care Medicine  (OVID Available online 2003)
卷期: Volume 31, issue 1  

页码: 293-298

 

ISSN:0090-3493

 

年代: 2003

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: critical care;medical education;undergraduate;survey;curriculum;syllabus

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

ObjectiveTo identify a consensus of opinion regarding the content of an intensive care core syllabus for undergraduate medical students and factors that may limit its teaching.DesignCross-sectional postal survey containing 35 items ranging from department structure to curriculum content and factors that limit the teaching of intensive care.SettingEnglish-speaking medical schools (n = 210) listed in the 1986 World Health Organization Directory.Measurements and Main ResultsOf 122 (58%) returned questionnaires, a 45% return was achieved from the United States and 86% from non-U.S. countries. Most respondents (84%) considered teaching undergraduate intensive care to be essential; however, teaching intensive care was compulsory in only 31% of schools. Many schools (43%) reported recent changes to their intensive care curriculum. Most respondents (60%) thought that intensive care specialists should teach and that each student required a median (interquartile range) of 20 (10–80) hrs of teacher contact time. Resuscitation skills were taught in 98% of schools. In comparison, 63% of schools had no intensive care syllabus. More than 90% of respondents thought that the intensive care syllabus should include the following: cardiopulmonary resuscitation, assessment and management of the acutely ill patient; management of respiratory, circulatory, and multiple organ system failure (including systemic inflammatory response syndrome and sepsis); management of the unconscious patient; early postoperative care; and communication skills and ethics as they relate to end-of-life issues. Factors that limited intensive care teaching were lack of staff, funding, and time dedicated to teaching and excessive clinical workload. Student performance in intensive care was assessed by 66% of schools, but only 28% used a written or oral examination.ConclusionsBy surveying a wide range of medical schools internationally, we have been able to define an undergraduate intensive care syllabus that could be delivered in 20 hrs or 1 wk of dedicated teaching time. Factors that impede the provision of undergraduate intensive care teaching are a lack of staff, funding, and dedicated teaching time.

 

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