Abstract

ObjectivesThis study aimed to identify the factors that support or inhibit medical teachers as healthy role models in medical school to conduct healthy behavior. MethodsThis qualitative study involved semi-structured in-depth interviews with medical teachers categorized as healthy role models in a medical school from a previous survey. Ten medical teachers were selected using purposive sampling. Three medical teachers were interviewed by direct meetings, and the remaining were phone interviewed, with one interview facilitated by chat using WhatsApp. Transcribed interviews were coded openly. Themes were finalized through discussion and debate to reach a consensus. ResultsTwo themes were identified: perceived facilitators and perceived barriers, which were classified into four categories and 13 subcategories: intrinsic facilitators (motivation, conscious awareness, having physical limitations, knowledge, and economic reasons); extrinsic facilitators (the impact on doing a particular job, feedback, time, and environment); intrinsic barriers (the lack of self-motivation and having physical limitations); and extrinsic barriers (the burden of responsibilities for being medical teachers and environment). ConclusionsFactors that support and inhibit medical teachers as healthy role models in medical school are influenced by intrinsic and extrinsic factors. This result could be used by medical schools to design appropriate interventions to help medical teachers as healthy role models in conducting healthy behavior. More studies are needed to explore other factors that influence medical teachers to conduct healthy behavior. During the COVID-19 pandemic, healthy role models in medical schools are vitally important and significantly contribute to the overall health of a nation.

Highlights

  • Medical school, as a part of the university, is a context for implementing the Health-Promoting University (HPU) initiative

  • The intrinsic and extrinsic factors were identified as perceived facilitators and barriers that influenced medical teachers as a healthy role model in medical school to perform healthy behavior

  • The intrinsic and extrinsic facilitators that support medical teachers as a healthy role model in medical school to perform healthy behavior were explained in more detail below with quotations

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Summary

Introduction

As a part of the university, is a context for implementing the Health-Promoting University (HPU) initiative. First implemented at The University of Central Lancashire in 1995, this initiative aims to create a school environment and culture that integrate health values in their teaching and learning activities as well as in educational policies. Providing healthy role models for students by both faculty and staff is the main characteristic of any school that has successfully implemented HPU.[1]. The existence of a school environment and culture that integrates health values helps to develop the characteristics of medical teachers, staff, and students as ‘agents of change’ for a healthy lifestyle in the community. Dooris[1] explained that this personal health empowerment is one of six main focuses of HPU implementation in the school

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