Barriers to implementing a health policy curriculum in medical schools

Raihan Mohammed, Jamil Shah Foridi, Innocent OgunmwonyiFaculty of Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UKAs clinical medical students, we read with great interest the perspective by Malik et al.1 Although medical schools excel at educating students on the pathology and treatment of diseases...

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Main Authors: Mohammed R, Shah Foridi J, Ogunmwonyi I
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2017-12-01
Series:Advances in Medical Education and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/barriers-to-implementing-a-health-policy-curriculum-in-medical-schools-peer-reviewed-article-AMEP
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spelling doaj-474a26459e1c412a877c2059824513b62020-11-24T23:41:38ZengDove Medical PressAdvances in Medical Education and Practice1179-72582017-12-01Volume 95636099Barriers to implementing a health policy curriculum in medical schoolsMohammed RShah Foridi JOgunmwonyi IRaihan Mohammed, Jamil Shah Foridi, Innocent OgunmwonyiFaculty of Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UKAs clinical medical students, we read with great interest the perspective by Malik et al.1 Although medical schools excel at educating students on the pathology and treatment of diseases, we agree on the severe deficiency in teaching health policy (HP) in the medical curriculum. However, the authors fail to include challenges facing this implementation, which is an important aspect of the analysis. Thus, here we outline 3 key barriers that must be considered when including HP teaching in the medical curricula.First, as the authors mention, the medical curriculum is already saturated and there is insufficient space to add obligatory HP learning in timetables. The UK curriculum is so packed that lecturers resort to teaching facts, which students then rote-learn and commit to memory. This leaves little time for students to develop a deep understanding of the pathophysiology of diseases and subsequent management, and they also fail to develop core lifelong skills, including problem solving and critical thinking.2 It is well acknowledged that the medical course is extremely rigorous, and up to 90% of students have admitted to suffering from stress and up to 75% have complained of burnout.3 With mental health issues among students reaching epidemic levels, adding HP lectures to the timetable would put undue strain on both the medical school curricula and the students.View the original article by Malik et al.https://www.dovepress.com/barriers-to-implementing-a-health-policy-curriculum-in-medical-schools-peer-reviewed-article-AMEPHealth Policy Limitations Medical curriculum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammed R
Shah Foridi J
Ogunmwonyi I
spellingShingle Mohammed R
Shah Foridi J
Ogunmwonyi I
Barriers to implementing a health policy curriculum in medical schools
Advances in Medical Education and Practice
Health Policy Limitations Medical curriculum
author_facet Mohammed R
Shah Foridi J
Ogunmwonyi I
author_sort Mohammed R
title Barriers to implementing a health policy curriculum in medical schools
title_short Barriers to implementing a health policy curriculum in medical schools
title_full Barriers to implementing a health policy curriculum in medical schools
title_fullStr Barriers to implementing a health policy curriculum in medical schools
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to implementing a health policy curriculum in medical schools
title_sort barriers to implementing a health policy curriculum in medical schools
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Advances in Medical Education and Practice
issn 1179-7258
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Raihan Mohammed, Jamil Shah Foridi, Innocent OgunmwonyiFaculty of Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UKAs clinical medical students, we read with great interest the perspective by Malik et al.1 Although medical schools excel at educating students on the pathology and treatment of diseases, we agree on the severe deficiency in teaching health policy (HP) in the medical curriculum. However, the authors fail to include challenges facing this implementation, which is an important aspect of the analysis. Thus, here we outline 3 key barriers that must be considered when including HP teaching in the medical curricula.First, as the authors mention, the medical curriculum is already saturated and there is insufficient space to add obligatory HP learning in timetables. The UK curriculum is so packed that lecturers resort to teaching facts, which students then rote-learn and commit to memory. This leaves little time for students to develop a deep understanding of the pathophysiology of diseases and subsequent management, and they also fail to develop core lifelong skills, including problem solving and critical thinking.2 It is well acknowledged that the medical course is extremely rigorous, and up to 90% of students have admitted to suffering from stress and up to 75% have complained of burnout.3 With mental health issues among students reaching epidemic levels, adding HP lectures to the timetable would put undue strain on both the medical school curricula and the students.View the original article by Malik et al.
topic Health Policy Limitations Medical curriculum
url https://www.dovepress.com/barriers-to-implementing-a-health-policy-curriculum-in-medical-schools-peer-reviewed-article-AMEP
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