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1.
Med Teach ; 34(12): e785-93, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23216143

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Dalhousie University's MD Programme faced a one-year timeline for renewal of its undergraduate curriculum. AIM: Key goals were renewed faculty engagement for ongoing quality improvement and increased collaboration across disciplines for an integrated curriculum, with the goal of preparing physicians for practice in the twenty-first century. METHODS: We engaged approximately 600 faculty members, students, staff and stakeholders external to the faculty of medicine in a process described by Harris (1993) as 'deliberative curriculum inquiry'. Temporally overlapping and networked intraprofessional and interprofessional teams developed programme outcomes, completed environment scans of emerging content and best practices, and designed curricular units. RESULTS: The resulting curriculum is the product of new collaborations among faculty and exemplifies distinct forms of integration. Innovations include content and cases shared by concurrent units, foundations courses at the beginning of each year and integrative experiences at the end, and an interprofessional community health mentors programme. CONCLUSION: The use of deliberative inquiry for pre-med curriculum renewal on a one-year time frame is feasible, in part through the use of technology. Ongoing structures for integration remain challenging. Although faculty collaboration fosters integration, a learner-centred lens must guide its design.


Subject(s)
Curriculum , Education, Medical, Undergraduate , Group Processes , Interdisciplinary Communication , Program Development , Cooperative Behavior , Nova Scotia , Organizational Case Studies
2.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 48(2): 109-18, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21639654

ABSTRACT

The advent of readily accessible, inexpensive Web-conferencing applications has opened the door for distance psychotherapy supervision, using video recordings of treated clients. Although relatively new, this method of supervision is advantageous given the ease of use and low cost of various Internet applications. This method allows periodic supervision from point to point around the world, with no travel costs and no long gaps between direct training contacts. Web-conferencing permits face-to-face training so that the learner and supervisor can read each other's emotional responses while reviewing case material. It allows group learning from direct supervision to complement local peer-to-peer learning methods. In this article, we describe the relevant literature on this type of learning method, the practical points in its utilization, its limitations, and its benefits.


Subject(s)
Internet , Mentors , Psychotherapy/education , Videoconferencing , Anxiety/psychology , Anxiety/therapy , Attitude of Health Personnel , Communication , Curriculum , Defense Mechanisms , Emotions , Humans , Professional Competence , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychoanalytic Therapy/education , Psychotherapy, Brief/education , Psychotherapy, Group/education , Surveys and Questionnaires , Video Recording
3.
J Anat ; 204(Pt 3): 151-63, 2004 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15032905

ABSTRACT

Hyperphalangy is a digit morphology in which increased numbers of phalanges are arranged linearly within a digit beyond the plesiomorphic condition. We analyse patterns and processes of hyperphalangy by considering previous definitions and occurrences of hyperphalangy among terrestrial and secondarily aquatic extant and fossil taxa (cetaceans, ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs and mosasaurs), and recent studies that elucidate the factors involved in terrestrial autopod joint induction. Extreme hyperphalangy, defined as exceeding a threshold condition of 4/6/6/6/6, is shown only to be found among secondarily aquatic vertebrates with a flipper limb morphology. Based on this definition, hyperphalangy occurs exclusively in digits II and III among extant cetaceans. Previous reports of cetacean embryos having more phalanges than adults is clarified and shown to be based on cartilaginous elements not ossified phalanges. Developmental prerequisites for hyperphalangy include lack of cell death in interdigital mesoderm (producing a flipper limb) and maintenance of a secondary apical ectodermal ridge (AER), which initiates digit elongation and extra joint patterning. Factors of the limb-patterning pathways located in the interdigital mesoderm, including bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), BMP antagonists, fibroblast growth factors (FGFs), growth/differentiation factor-5 (GDF-5), Wnt-14 and ck-erg, are implicated in maintenance of the flipper limb, secondary AER formation, digit elongation and additional joint induction leading to hyperphalangy.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Bone and Bones/anatomy & histology , Forelimb/anatomy & histology , Animals , Bone and Bones/embryology , Cetacea/anatomy & histology , Forelimb/embryology , Morphogenesis , Phylogeny
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