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Medical ethics education: Coming of age.

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TLDR
The authors define medical ethics education as more clinically centered than human values education and more inclusive of philosophical, social, and legal issues than is interpersonal skills training.
Abstract
Medical ethics education is instruction that endeavors to teach the examination of the role of values in the doctor's relationship with patients, colleagues, and society. It is one front of a broad curricular effort to develop physicians' values, social perspectives, and interpersonal skills for the practice of medicine. The authors define medical ethics education as more clinically centered than human values education and more inclusive of philosophical, social, and legal issues than is interpersonal skills training. The authors review the history of the emergence of medical ethics education over the last 20 years, examine the areas of consensus that have emerged concerning the general objectives and premises for designing medical ethics programs, and describe teaching objectives and methods, course content, and program evaluation used in such programs on both preclinical and clinical levels. The four interrelated requirements for successful institutionalization of medical ethics education programs are defined and discussed, and the paper ends with an overview of the uncertain future of medical ethics education, an accepted but still not fully mature part of physician training in the United States. An extensive reference list accompanies the article.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Role modeling in physicians' professional formation: reconsidering an essential but untapped educational strategy

TL;DR: The authors identify foundational questions regarding role models and professional character formation; describe major social and historical reasons for inattention to character formation in new physicians; draw insights about this important area from ethics and education theory; and suggest the practical consequences of this work for faculty recruitment, affirmation, and development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Medical ethics education: where are we? Where should we be going? A review.

TL;DR: Deep shortcomings exist in the literature on medical ethics education and the field would benefit from further theoretical work aimed at better delineating the core content, core processes, and core skills relevant to the ethical practice of medicine.
Reference BookDOI

A Companion to Bioethics

Helga Kuhse, +1 more
TL;DR: A companion to bioethics, A companion to Bioethics as mentioned in this paper, a companion to the bioethic, and a companion of the humanist movement in the 21st century.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review of ethics curricula in undergraduate medical education.

TL;DR: The background to its inclusion in undergraduate curriculum and the consensus that has arisen on the design of ethics curricula are examined, using Harden’s curriculum and S.I.C.E.S models as templates.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Other Objective of Ethics Education: Re-humanising the Accounting Profession – A Study of Ethics Education in Law, Engineering, Medicine and Accountancy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that accountancy has become dangerously dehumanised and that one of the most important objectives for any business ethics education must be to develop an empathy with "the other".
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