1986
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.1986.tb01177.x
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An assessment of priority and educational value in a medical curriculum

Abstract: A randomly selected group of teachers, students, first-year graduates (junior doctors in the first year of postgraduate training after their final medical school examination), general practitioners and specialists responded to a postal questionnaire designed to assess their views on the priorities in medical curriculum and the educational value attributed to its content. Comparisons were made among the five participating groups and the outcome of the assessment was compared with the existing curriculum.

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“…Furthermore, the early introduction of clinical subjects has been postulated to promote the development of heuristic thinking and an holistic attitude (Dohn and Nystrup 1986). In the present study the lectures explained how assuming the upright posture leads to hypotension and fainting if the baroreceptor reflex fails either as the result of disease causing damage to the sympathetic nervous system or the use of certain drugs, so that the facts were taught in a clinical context.…”
Section: Concrete Clinical Experiencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, the early introduction of clinical subjects has been postulated to promote the development of heuristic thinking and an holistic attitude (Dohn and Nystrup 1986). In the present study the lectures explained how assuming the upright posture leads to hypotension and fainting if the baroreceptor reflex fails either as the result of disease causing damage to the sympathetic nervous system or the use of certain drugs, so that the facts were taught in a clinical context.…”
Section: Concrete Clinical Experiencesmentioning
confidence: 99%