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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of a model curriculum on substance abuse at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

TLDR
It is suggested that enhanced experiential sessions, elective programs, and greater emphasis during the clinical years on issues relating to substance abuse are necessary for maintaining the desirable educational outcomes of a substance abuse management curriculum, and that an intensive program against a backdrop of curriculum reform is a useful model.
Abstract
Beginning in 1985, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine developed a model curriculum on alcohol abuse to enhance the education of medical students in issues related to the abuse of alcohol and other drugs. By 1987, preclinical courses (given in years one and two) reflected the goals of the curriculum; however, integration of the curriculum into the clinical courses (given in years three and four) was only partially successful. This paper reports on nine annual surveys of students (the classes of 1989-1992) that were conducted from 1987 to 1990 to measure the effects of the curriculum, using previously validated instruments to record the students' knowledge, attitudes, beliefs in role responsibility, and confidence in clinical skills. Significant improvements occurred in the students' attitudes, beliefs in role responsibility, and confidence in skills during their preclinical years. These positive changes were stronger, and better sustained during the clinical years, in students who participated in special programs or elective courses focusing on substance abuse; the positive changes were not always sustained in other students. The authors suggest that enhanced experiential sessions, elective programs, and greater emphasis during the clinical years on issues relating to substance abuse are necessary for maintaining the desirable educational outcomes of a substance abuse management curriculum, and that an intensive program against a backdrop of curriculum reform is a useful model.

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Why physicians are unprepared to treat patients who have alcohol- and drug-related disorders.

TL;DR: The authors reviewed the findings of the literature on these problems, discuss the barriers to educational reform, and propose recommendations for developing an effective medical school curriculum about alcohol- and drug-related disorders.
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Self-efficacy and OSCE performance among second year medical students.

TL;DR: Confidence of second-year medical students regarding their OSCE performance was examined, and performance was found to be the product of complex relationships between skills and knowledge, mediated by perceptions of anxiety, self-confidence and preparedness.
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Training physicians to treat substance use disorders.

TL;DR: The importance of training physicians to effectively assess and manage substance use disorders has become increasingly recognized and studies highlighting the effort to enhance curricula are described and common practices identified.
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Physicians-in-training attitudes toward caring for and working with patients with alcohol and drug abuse diagnoses.

TL;DR: Combining effective education strategies with the needs of physicians at specific points in their education may be effective in reversing the negative trends seen in attitudes toward caring for patients with substance abuse problems.
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Health professionals’ attitudes towards AOD-related work: Moving the traditional focus from education and training to organizational culture

TL;DR: A critical review of research on health professionals’ attitudes towards alcohol and other drug (AOD)-related work is presented, moving beyond education and training programs to examine the relevance of organizational culture in influencing attitudes.
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The authors suggest that enhanced experiential sessions, elective programs, and greater emphasis during the clinical years on issues relating to substance abuse are necessary for maintaining the desirable educational outcomes of a substance abuse management curriculum, and that an intensive program against a backdrop of curriculum reform is a useful model.