Perception of professionalism among first year medical students in OIU

Joint Authors

Adam, Ahmad Muhammad
Ibn Awf, Muhammad M. A. M.
Karrar, Musaab
Mardi, Tariq Jumah
al-Hadi, al-Sadiq
Abu al-Nasir, Hazim
Ibn Awf, Abd al-Rahman M. A. M.
Ibn Awf, M. A. M.

Source

Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences

Issue

Vol. 7, Issue 2 (31 Mar. 2012), pp.77-82, 6 p.

Publisher

Omdurman Islamic University Faculty of Medicine

Publication Date

2012-03-31

Country of Publication

Sudan

No. of Pages

6

Main Subjects

Educational Sciences
Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

Background: Since days of Hippocrates, and passing through the Geneva Declaration and Helsinki Convention the eve of the 21st century guidelines and mission statements dominated the medical education and practice.

Giving and receiving feedback are critical skills and should be taught early in the process of medical education, yet few studies discuss the effect of feedback curricula for first- year medical students.

Aim: To evaluate the concepts of professionalism among the first year medical students.

Set up: The Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Omdurman Islamic University where students are taught Material and methods: The first year medical students at the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Omdurman Islamic University were taught the Human Rights declaration issued by the United Nations in Dec 1948, The Principals of Islamic Human Rights, basics of medical ethics and the Doctors Figh and University Requirement course of Islamic studies.

A pretested questionnaire, self -administered questionnaire with five Likert scale was distributed.

Results: The total number of the first year medical students was 257 but 207(80.5%) successfully completed the questionnaire.

A total of 98% strongly agreed that the doctor must be truthful.

90% of the students and agreed that the doctor must be caring, kind and empathetic, respect the others, skilful, dedicated and Also, should comply with the patients' needs (One sample t-test 2-tailed P = 0.0001).

However, 23(13.8%) students disagree on the role of the doctor as an advocate for the patient.

The students strongly agreed for the importance of working as a team and sparing the patient not to be harmed had any conflict raised (one sample t-test 2-tailed P = 0.0001).

Conclusion: The first year medical students seem to have benefited of the Human Rights declaration issued by the United Nations in Dec 1948, The Principals of Islamic Human Rights, basics of medical ethics and the Doctors Fight and university requirement course of Islamic studies.

About 9(5.4%) -24(12.4%) are not clear about the role of the medical professional in the society in advocating for patients.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Ibn Awf, Muhammad M. A. M.& Karrar, Musaab& Mardi, Tariq Jumah& al-Hadi, al-Sadiq& Abu al-Nasir, Hazim& Ibn Awf, Abd al-Rahman M. A. M.…[et al.]. 2012. Perception of professionalism among first year medical students in OIU. Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences،Vol. 7, no. 2, pp.77-82.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-301013

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Ibn Awf, Muhammad M. A. M.…[et al.]. Perception of professionalism among first year medical students in OIU. Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences Vol. 7, no. 2 (Jun. 2012), pp.77-82.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-301013

American Medical Association (AMA)

Ibn Awf, Muhammad M. A. M.& Karrar, Musaab& Mardi, Tariq Jumah& al-Hadi, al-Sadiq& Abu al-Nasir, Hazim& Ibn Awf, Abd al-Rahman M. A. M.…[et al.]. Perception of professionalism among first year medical students in OIU. Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences. 2012. Vol. 7, no. 2, pp.77-82.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-301013

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 81-82

Record ID

BIM-301013