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Showing 2 results for Rabiei

Sakineh Mohebbi Amin, Mehdi Rabiei, Amir Hossein Keizoori,
Volume 8, Issue 3 (9-2015)
Abstract

In recent years, the general consensus is that medical education should comprise ethics courses focusing on clinical decision-making skills and professional ethics in order to institutionalize a set of values in physicians. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the internal and external qualities of the medical ethics curriculum from the perspective of students.This was a survey research on a study population of 157 medical students who were taking the medical ethics course. A sample of 113 students were selected by simple random sampling, and data collection tool consisted of two researcher-made questionnaires. In this research, the internal quality of the curriculum was evaluated according to the following 9 elements as proposed by Francis Klein: objectives, content, learning activities, learning strategies, instructional material, resources, grouping, time, location, and evaluation. The external quality of the curriculum was assessed based on Kirkpatrick’s model with attention to students' views on achievement of course objectives in terms of knowledge, skills and attitudes. Data analysis was performed using descriptive statistics (mean and standard deviation) and inferential statistics (one-sample t-test). Based on the findings, the students viewed the internal quality of the medical ethics curriculum as undesirable in terms of the above-mentioned nine elements. Students also believed that the external quality of the ethics curriculum was at an average level in the knowledge and attitudes components, and undesirable in the skills component. Overall, our findings indicate that from the perspective of students, the quality of the medical ethics curriculum is low and the course needs to be reviewed and redesigned.


Reza Shahrabadi, Roghayeh Javan, Roghayeh Zardosht, Mojgan Ansari, Mehdi Rabiei, Hamideh Yazdimoghaddam,
Volume 16, Issue 1 (3-2023)
Abstract

The health team, in their daily operations, are faced with many ethical issues they have to solve. Moral knowledge includes confronting with and resolving conflicts, values, norms, interests, or laws. Identifying the ethical challenges of the health system can contribute to the efficiency of educational and health programs of universities of medical sciences. The objective of this study was to explain the components of professional ethics in therapeutic and health interactions with patients. In this qualitative research, the Delphi method was used to determine the components of professional ethics. The participants were composed of three groups including faculty members, students, and clinical staff who were selected using purposive sampling. First, by reviewing the literature, a semi-structured questionnaire was developed to investigate different components of professional ethics. Then, using the Delphi method in four rounds, the ethical components were selected and by checking content validity indices (CVR and CVI), the final version of professional ethics components was explained based on therapeutic and health interactions with patients. The results of the qualitative research and the Delphi model led to the extraction of the 12 most common ethical components including disclosure of patients’ secrets, lack of justice in providing services, lack of respect for the patient’s discretion, medical and treatment staff errors, lack of compliance with regulations and standards of treatment and care, non-observance of legal regulations in telling bad news by the doctor, non-observance of dying patient’s rights, non-observance of patient’s privacy, lack of proper training of care principles and new and up-to-date treatment tips to students and staff, and finally, non-observance of professional communication. Accordingly, the final components were compiled as a questionnaire. Achieving ethical competence requires the identification of ethical components in educational, therapeutic, and care environments, especially in interaction with the patient. Therefore, it is necessary to identify, structure and formulate ethical components in regular and continuous training programs in the field of importance and observance of ethical principles in medical and health centers.


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