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1.
Int J Impot Res ; 15 Suppl 5: S46-50, 2003 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14551577

ABSTRACT

Recent national and global initiatives have drawn attention to the importance of sexual health to individuals' well-being. These initiatives advocate enhancement of efforts to address this under-represented topic in health professions curricula. University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS) has undertaken a comprehensive effort to develop an integrated curriculum in sexual health. The UMMS project draws upon the expertise of a multidisciplinary faculty of clinicians, basic scientists, a medical ethicist, and educators. This article describes the project's genesis and development at UMMS, and reports on three innovations in sexual health education implemented as part of this endeavor.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Undergraduate/methods , Sex Education/methods , Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological/therapy , Sexuality , Curriculum , Humans
4.
Acad Med ; 74(7): 821-8, 1999 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10429592

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To determine whether participation in an intensive domestic violence interclerkship (DVI) improved the knowledge, attitudes, and skills of two successive cohorts of students at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. METHOD: The authors measured the knowledge, attitudes, and skills pertaining to domestic violence of third-year students in the classes of 1997 and 1998 using a validated written examination administered before, immediately after, and six months after participation in a 3.5-day or two-day DVI, respectively; they compared the scores using paired t-tests. Nine months after the DVI, the students' domestic violence screening skills were measured by a performance-based assessment (OSCE); using unpaired t-tests, the authors compared the OSCE scores with those of a previous third-year class that had not participated in a DVI. Immediately after the OSCE, the students reported their levels of confidence in domestic violence screening and their satisfaction with the domestic violence curriculum; using chi-square analysis, those self-reports were compared with those of the class with no DVI. RESULTS: The students who participated in the DVIs immediately and significantly improved their knowledge, attitudes, and skills (p < .001), and fully or partially sustained those improvements six months later (p < .001). Nine months after the DVI, the students performed domestic violence screening more effectively (p < .001), expressed greater comfort with domestic violence screening (p < .001), and felt better-prepared by the curriculum to address domestic violence issues (p < .001) than did the students with no DVI. CONCLUSION: Participation in a short, focused DVI curriculum produced sustainable improvements in knowledge, attitudes, and skills that were successfully applied by third-year medical students to effective domestic violence screening. Interclerkships are an effective way to fit into the clinical curriculum those subjects that transcend the traditional biomedical domain and intersect all areas of medical practice.


Subject(s)
Clinical Clerkship , Clinical Competence , Domestic Violence , Education, Medical , Adult , Attitude , Chi-Square Distribution , Child , Cohort Studies , Curriculum , Educational Measurement , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Massachusetts , Personal Satisfaction , Students, Medical
5.
Acad Med ; 74(1 Suppl): S90-7, 1999 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9934316

ABSTRACT

In 1995 as part of The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Generalist Physician Initiative, the University of Massachusetts (UMass) Medical School developed the "standardized family" as a new model for teaching the essential elements of primary care in a core curriculum format outside of the clinical setting. Using this model, a hypothetical family unit (the "McQ Family") serves as the focus for case-based clinical problem solving. This paper describes the standardized family model and provides two years of evaluation outcomes such as curriculum assessments, student performance outcomes, and correlation with external measures of clinical performance to support the effectiveness of this educational model. It discusses the transferability of the standardized family model from UMass Medical School to Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine and uses Pennsylvania State's adaptation (the "Hershey-Penn Family") to illustrate how the standardized family can be customized to integrate a core curriculum into a three-year longitudinal primary care program. The authors suggest that the standardized family model has the potential to meet a broad range of primary care teaching needs at other institutions.


Subject(s)
Curriculum , Education, Medical, Undergraduate , Family Practice/education , Models, Educational , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/organization & administration , Humans , Massachusetts , Program Development , Program Evaluation , Schools, Medical
8.
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