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Nurturing professionalism in medical schools. A systematic scoping review of training curricula between 1990–2019

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posted on 2020-02-17, 13:30 authored by Yun Ting Ong, Cheryl Shumin Kow, Yao Hao Teo, Lorraine Hui En Tan, Ahmad Bin Hanifah Marican Abdurrahman, Nicholas Wei Sheng Quek, Kishore Prakash, Clarissa Wei Shuen Cheong, Xiu Hui Tan, Wei Qiang Lim, Jiaxuan Wu, Laura Hui Shuen Tan, Kuang Teck Tay, Annelissa Chin, Ying Pin Toh, Stephen Mason, Lalit Kumar Radha Krishna

Introduction: Professionalism is an evolving, socioculturally informed multidimensional construct that influences doctor-patient relationships, patient satisfaction and care outcomes. However, despite its clinical significance there is little consistency in how professionalism is nurtured amongst medical students. To address this gap a systemic scoping review of nurturing professionalism in medical schools, is proposed.

Methods: Levac’s framework and the PRISMA-P 2015 checklist underpinned a 6-stage systematic review protocol. Concurrent use of Braun and Clarke’s approach to thematic analysis and directed content analysis was used to identify the key elements in nurturing professionalism.

Results: 13921 abstracts were identified from six databases, 854 full-text articles reviewed, and 162 full-text included articles were included. The 4 themes identified through thematic analysis are consistent with findings of the directed content analysis. These were the definition of professionalism, the approaches, content, barriers and enablers to teaching professionalism.

Conclusion: Informed by a viable definition of professionalism and clear milestones nurturing professionalism nurturing professionalism begins with culturally appropriate training in clinical competence, humanistic qualities and reflective capacity. This process requires effective evaluations of professional identity formation, and the impact of the learning environment underlining the need for longitudinal assessments of the training process.

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