Abstract

BackgroundAs part of the process to develop more community-oriented medical teaching in Vietnam, eight medical schools prepared a set of standard learning objectives with attention to the needs of a doctor working with the community. Because they were prepared based on government documents and the opinions of the teachers, it was necessary to check them with doctors who had already graduated and were working at different sites in the community.MethodsEach of the eight medical faculties asked 100 practising recent graduates to complete a questionnaire to check the relevance of the skills that the teachers considered most important. We used mean and standard deviation to summarize the scores rated by the respondents for each skill and percentile at four points: p50, p25, p10 and p5 to describe the variation of scores among the respondents. Correlation coefficient was used to measure the relationship between skill levels set by the teachers and the perception of practicing doctors regarding frequency of using skills and priority for each skill. Additional information was taken from the records of focus group discussions to clarify, explain or expand on the results from the quantitative data.ResultsIn many cases the skills considered important by teachers were also rated as highly necessary and/or frequently used by the respondents. There were, however, discrepancies: some skills important to teachers were seldom used and not considered important by the doctors. In focus group discussions the doctors also identified skills that are not taught at all in the medical schools but would be needed by practising doctors. ConclusionAlthough most of the skills and skill levels included in the learning objectives by the teachers were consistent with the opinions of their graduates, the match was not perfect. The experience of the graduates and their additional comments should be included as inputs to the definition of learning objectives for medical students.

Highlights

  • As part of the process to develop more community-oriented medical teaching in Vietnam, eight medical schools prepared a set of standard learning objectives with attention to the needs of a doctor working with the community

  • Development of the data collection tools, data entry and analysis was led by Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) Medical School, with contributions from each of the others

  • A number of specializations that are common in developed countries are under-represented in Vietnam and were grouped with Internal Medicine

Read more

Summary

Introduction

As part of the process to develop more community-oriented medical teaching in Vietnam, eight medical schools prepared a set of standard learning objectives with attention to the needs of a doctor working with the community. The government set a target for the year 2000, to have at least 40% of commune health centres staffed by a medical doctor These policies put pressure on medical schools to revise their curriculum and teaching methods so that graduates would function better at community level. The larger medical universities of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) provide undergraduate and postgraduate training for the whole country These eight schools worked together in a project to improve their teaching and to make it more community-oriented. The development of these objectives was based on a set of 274 health problems and solutions prioritized by a combination of national and regional health statistics and the opinions of senior teachers in the eight schools [4]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call