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1.
Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences. 2007; 2 (3): 161-164
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-165044

ABSTRACT

Prescription writing is a skill that almost every doctor will use several times a day. But are medical students effectively taught how to write a complete and accurate prescription? Most commonly the answer is no. There is increasing need for the rational use of medicines and the clearly appropriate prescribing is a key to achieve this. To find out whether a short training course of problem-based pharmacotherapy teaching, improves the competence of rational prescribing among medical students. All 6th year medical students [Batch 13], Omdurman Islamic university were randomly separated into intervention and control group. Students of intervention group were taught to choose P-drug for different diseases and how to apply this choice to specific patient problem, using the WHO- six steps problem solving approach. The competence of intervention group is significantly better than the control group p =0.011. The mean results of post test for intervention group was [3.4 +/- 4.5] and for the control group was [2.1 +/- 1.9]. Teaching medical students all basic knowledge about drugs does not guarantee rational prescribing. Additional short course of problem-based pharmacotherapy could be effective in improving prescribing skills among Sudanese medical students

2.
Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences. 2006; 1 (2): 147-148
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-75142

ABSTRACT

Cutaneous myiasis [CM] is invasion of human skin by larvae of dipterous flies CM is encountered world-wide and is endemic in several tropical countries, mainly in central and south American. Cases have been reported in non-tropical countries such as USA, UK, Germany, and Japan. Patients with CM due to Dermatobia hominis usually suffer from painful pruritic furuncular skin lesion with a serous or seropurulent discharge accompanied by a crawling sensation. The disease may resolve spontaneously, however conservative and/or surgical treatment may be indicated. Fatal CM due to D. hominis was reported from Brazil where a scalp lesion had disseminated into the brain. In Sudan, CM seems uncommon, unreported or probably underdiagnosed. In this communication we describe a case of CM due to D. hominis which seems to have been acquired from an indigenous source


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Myiasis/diagnosis , Myiasis/transmission , Myiasis/prevention & control , Myiasis/therapy , Early Diagnosis
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