Abstract

Preparing health professionals in health promotion (HP) and disease prevention is essential for improvement of population health, community HP, and better health care for individuals. The aim of this article is to describe an HP project in the form of a major self-directed project-based learning task integrated within the curriculum in the second year of the medical degree program at United Arab Emirates University. The project introduces students to public health and HP practice and develops students’ literature searching, writing, presentation skills, and team work. Students learn the principles underlying behavioral change, and the design of HP programs and materials, through a lecture format. Small groups of students each choose a specific health topic for their project. Over 11 weeks, students obtain information about their topic from appropriate sources (library, PubMed, Google Scholar, credible health sources such as World Health Organization). Using the principles learned in the lectures, they develop appropriate materials for their target audience: for example, posters, a pamphlet, social media content, or a video or radio message. Students seek advice from specialist faculty as needed. In week 12, each team presents their project background, rationale, and materials to their colleagues in a seminar format open to all faculty. They then submit the materials they developed for assessment. Group marks are assigned for presentations and materials. Key concepts are assessed by multiple choice questions in comprehensive course examinations. By participation in the HP project, many students develop a solid background in prevention. The information retrieval, writing, and presentation skills, as well as experience of team work, are valuable both for the remaining years of their training and their future careers.

Highlights

  • AND RATIONALE FOR THE EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITYPreparing medical professionals in health promotion (HP) and disease prevention is considered an essential step for community HP, better health care for individuals, and development of population health strategies [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The World Health Organization and others identified the training of health-care providers in public health and community medicine as a key measure for better health care and for improving population health [4, 7,8,9], yet in the last century, courses in HP and prevention in the medical curriculum were patchy and unsystematic [3]; they gained more attention only recently [10,11,12,13,14]

  • In the United Arab Emirates (UAE), a fast developing country in the Middle East, chronic diseases and lifestyle-related health problems are increasingly placing a burden on the health-care system [18,19,20,21,22,23,24], it is important to address these issues in the medical curriculum

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Summary

Introduction

AND RATIONALE FOR THE EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITYPreparing medical professionals in health promotion (HP) and disease prevention is considered an essential step for community HP, better health care for individuals, and development of population health strategies [1,2,3,4,5]. Studies have reported that do medical students begin their program with poor knowledge about healthy lifestyle and prevention, and that their health, their personal lifestyle, and their perceptions about the importance of preventive approaches all deteriorate during their studies [11, 12, 15, 16] Such reports have raised fears that future health-care providers may contribute to worsening HP and public health practice, both by their lack of knowledge and skills in health education and promotion practice, and by being negative role models [16, 17].

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