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  1. Pharmacy education and pharmacy practice are facing remarkable changes following new scientific discoveries, evolving patient needs and the requirements of advanced pharmacy competency for practices. Many coun...

    Authors: Teeraporn Chanakit, Bee Yean Low, Payom Wongpoowarak, Summana Moolasarn and Claire Anderson
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:205
  2. Clinical practice guidelines are intended to improve the process and outcomes of patient care. However, their implementation remains a challenge. We designed an implementation strategy, based on peer assessmen...

    Authors: Marjo J. M. Maas, Simone A. van Dulmen, Margaretha H. Sagasser, Yvonne F. Heerkens, Cees P. M. van der Vleuten, Maria W. G. Nijhuis-van der Sanden and Philip J. van der Wees
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:203
  3. Despite the widespread recognition of the importance of mentoring in medical education, valid and reliable instruments for evaluating the relationship of mentors and protégés are lacking. The aim of this study...

    Authors: Matthias Schäfer, Tanja Pander, Severin Pinilla, Martin R. Fischer, Philip von der Borch and Konstantinos Dimitriadis
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:201
  4. To measure the effectiveness of procedural video compared to live demonstration in transferring skills for fabricating orthodontic Adam’s Clasp.

    Authors: Nasser D. Alqahtani, Thikriat Al-Jewair, Khalid AL-Moammar, Sahar F. Albarakati and Eman A. ALkofide
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:199
  5. Medical uncertainty is inherently related to the practice of the physician and generally affects his or her patient care, job satisfaction, continuing education, as well as the overall goals of the health care...

    Authors: Alicia Hamui-Sutton, Tania Vives-Varela, Samuel Gutiérrez-Barreto, Iwin Leenen and Melchor Sánchez-Mendiola
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:198
  6. This cross-sectional, questionnaire-based survey, conducted in Shanxi Province, China, evaluated the knowledge of community physicians of secondary prevention of ischemic stroke and transient ischemic attacks ...

    Authors: Chen Chen, Xiaoyuan Qiao, Huijie Kang, Ling Ding, Lixia Bai and Jintao Wang
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:197
  7. Universities should provide flexible and inclusive selection and admission policies to increase equity in access and outcomes for indigenous and ethnic minority students. This study investigates an equity-targete...

    Authors: Elana Curtis, Erena Wikaire, Yannan Jiang, Louise McMillan, Robert Loto, Airini and Papaarangi Reid
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:196
  8. Within the current health care system, leadership is considered important for physicians. leadership is mostly self-taught, through observing and practicing. Does the practice environment offer residents enoug...

    Authors: Martha A. van der Wal, Fedde Scheele, Johanna Schönrock-Adema, A. Debbie C. Jaarsma and Janke Cohen-Schotanus
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:195
  9. A national clinical practice guideline for pediatric palliative care was published in 2013. So far there are only few reports available on whether an educational program fosters compliance with such a guidelin...

    Authors: Charissa Thari Jagt - van Kampen, Leontien C. M. Kremer, A. A. Eduard Verhagen and Antoinette Y. N. Schouten - van Meeteren
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:194
  10. The high academic performance of medical students greatly influences their professional competence in long term career. Meanwhile, medical students greatly demand procuring a good quality of life that can help...

    Authors: Mohammad Abrar Shareef, Abdulhadi A. AlAmodi, Abdulrahman A. Al-Khateeb, Zainab Abudan, Mohammed A. Alkhani, Sanderlla I. Zebian, Ahmed S. Qannita and Mariam J. Tabrizi
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:193
  11. There are more than 4.9 million rural health workers undertaking the health care need of rural population of over 629 million in China. The lifelong learning of physicians is vital in maintaining up-to-date an...

    Authors: Honghe Li, Ziwei Wang, Nan Jiang, Yang Liu and Deliang Wen
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:192
  12. Valid and reliable instruments are required to measure the effect of educational interventions to improve evidence-based practice (EBP) knowledge and skills in occupational therapy. The aims of this paper are ...

    Authors: Helen Buchanan, Jennifer Jelsma and Nandi Siegfried
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:191
  13. In medical education, a learner-centred approach is recommended. There is also a trend towards workplace-based learning outside of the hospital setting. In Australia, this has resulted in an increased need for...

    Authors: Gerard Ingham, Jennifer Fry, Peter O’Meara and Vianne Tourle
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:190
  14. Inter-professional teamwork is key for patient safety and team training is an effective strategy to improve patient outcome. In-situ simulation is a relatively new strategy with emerging efficacy, but best pra...

    Authors: Katja Zimmermann, Iris Bachmann Holzinger, Lorena Ganassi, Peter Esslinger, Sina Pilgrim, Meredith Allen, Margarita Burmester and Martin Stocker
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:189
  15. Interprofessional collaboration is considered a key-factor to deliver the highest quality of care. Interprofessional collaboration (IPC) assumes a model of working together, in particular with awareness of the...

    Authors: Giannoula Tsakitzidis, Olaf Timmermans, Nadine Callewaert, Steven Truijen, Herman Meulemans and Paul Van Royen
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:188
  16. It is unknown what aspects of undergraduate surgical curricula are useful for future non-surgeons. We aimed to define relevant, enduring learning achievements for this subgroup to enable student-centered teach...

    Authors: Sabine Zundel, Adrian Meder, Stephan Zipfel and Anne Herrmann-Werner
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:187
  17. There is a need to improve design in educational programmes for the health sciences in general and in pharmacology specifically. The objective of this study was to investigate and problematize pharmacological ...

    Authors: Ann Zetterqvist, Patrik Aronsson, Staffan Hägg, Karin Kjellgren, Margareta Reis, Gunnar Tobin and Shirley Booth
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:186
  18. Multiple care failings in hospitals have led to calls for increased interprofessional training in medical education to improve multi-disciplinary teamwork. Providing practical interprofessional training has ma...

    Authors: Patricia McGettigan and Jean McKendree
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:185
  19. Advances in cognitive load theory have led to greater understanding of how we process verbal and visual material during learning, but the evidence base with regard to the use of images within written assessmen...

    Authors: Jane Holland, Robin O’Sullivan and Richard Arnett
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:184
  20. The few studies directly comparing the methodological approach of peer role play (RP) and standardized patients (SP) for the delivery of communication skills all suggest that both methods are effective. In thi...

    Authors: Hans Martin Bosse, Martin Nickel, Sören Huwendiek, Jobst Hendrik Schultz and Christoph Nikendei
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:183
  21. Thai pharmacy education has moved to an all Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) programme. However, there has been no previous research about the perceptions regarding the suitability of PharmD graduates employed in h...

    Authors: Teeraporn Chanakit, Bee Yean Low, Payom Wongpoowarak, Summana Moolasarn and Claire Anderson
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:181
  22. The recent growth of arts and humanities in medical education shows recognition that these disciplines can facilitate a breadth of thinking and result in personal and professional growth. However creative work...

    Authors: Lynn McBain, Sinéad Donnelly, Jo Hilder, Clare O’Leary and Eileen McKinlay
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:180
  23. Procedural skills training forms an essential, yet difficult to assess, component of an Internal Medicine Residency Program. We report the development of process of documentation and assessment of procedural s...

    Authors: Muhammad Tariq, Nizar Bhulani, Asif Jafferani, Quratulain Naeem, Syed Ahsan, Afaq Motiwala, Jan van Dalen and Saeed Hamid
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:179
  24. Aga Khan University is developing its undergraduate medical education curriculum for East Africa. In Kenya, a 1 year internship is mandatory for medical graduates’ registration as practitioners. The majority o...

    Authors: Patricia N. Muthaura, Tashmin Khamis, Mushtaq Ahmed and Syeda Ra’ana Hussain
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:178
  25. A major challenge for clinical supervisors is to encourage their residents to be independent without jeopardising patient safety. Residents’ preferences according to level of training on this regard have not b...

    Authors: Francisco Olmos-Vega, Diana Dolmans, Jeroen Donkers and Renée E. Stalmeijer
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:177
  26. Not least the much-invoked shortage of physicians in the current and the next generation has resulted in a wide range of efforts to improve postgraduate medical training. This is also in the focus of the curre...

    Authors: Peter Iblher, Marzellus Hofmann, Michaela Zupanic and Georg Breuer
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:176
  27. Increasing proportions of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CALD) students within health professional courses at universities creates challenges in delivering inclusive training and education. Clinical pl...

    Authors: Sharleen L. O’Reilly and Julia Milner
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:175
  28. The value of international health experience for doctors from developed nations is well recognised. Provisions have been made for medical staff in the United Kingdom to embark on work experiences abroad during...

    Authors: Candice Reardon, Gavin George and Oluwatobi Enigbokan
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:174
  29. Digital games have been demonstrated to be beneficial for a range of non-recreational purposes, with a particular focus on their value for education. There is a limited amount of research supporting their use ...

    Authors: Anna Janssen, Tim Shaw, Peter Goodyear, B. Price Kerfoot and Deborah Bryce
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:173
  30. Team Objective Structured Bedside Assessment (TOSBA) is a learning approach in which a team of medical students undertake a set of structured clinical tasks with real patients in order to reach a diagnosis and...

    Authors: Richard P. Deane, Pauline Joyce and Deirdre J. Murphy
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:172
  31. Children present commonly with musculoskeletal (MSK) problems, due to a spectrum of causes including potentially life threatening disease, to doctors in varied health care settings. However, doctors involved i...

    Authors: Sharmila Jandial, Jane Stewart and Helen E. Foster
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:171
  32. Applying for medical school is the first and also one of the most important career choices a physician makes. It is important to understand the reasons behind this decision if we are to choose the best applica...

    Authors: Teppo J. Heikkilä, Harri Hyppölä, Jukka Vänskä, Tiina Aine, Hannu Halila, Santero Kujala, Irma Virjo, Markku Sumanen and Kari Mattila
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:169
  33. Clinical placement is an essential element of paramedicine education and training as the profession completes the transition from vocational training to a pre-employment, university based model. The objective ...

    Authors: Helen Hickson, Brett Williams and Peter O’Meara
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:168
  34. The UNSW Australia Medicine program explicitly structures peer learning in program wide mixing of students where students from two adjoining cohorts complete the same course together, including all learning ac...

    Authors: Helen A. Scicluna, Anthony J. O’Sullivan, Patrick Boyle, Philip D. Jones and H. Patrick McNeil
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:167
  35. Widening access to medicine in the UK is a recalcitrant problem of increasing political importance, with associated strong social justice arguments but without clear evidence of impact on service delivery. Evi...

    Authors: J. Dowell, M. Norbury, K. Steven and B. Guthrie
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:165
  36. Chronic pain treatment guidelines are unclear and conflicting, which contributes to inconsistent pain care. In order to improve pain care, it is important to understand the various factors that providers rely ...

    Authors: Nicole A. Hollingshead, Samantha Meints, Stephanie K. Middleton, Charnelle A. Free and Adam T. Hirsh
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:164
  37. This study attempts to understand whether medical undergraduates in Sri Lanka would seek help for depression. This was done by examining their perceptions and intentions relating to seeking help for depression...

    Authors: Santushi D. Amarasuriya, Anthony F. Jorm and Nicola J. Reavley
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:162
  38. In international health experiences, learners are exposed to different culturally-based patient care models. Little is known about student perceptions of patient-provider interactions when they travel from low...

    Authors: Nauzley C. Abedini, Sandra Danso-Bamfo, Joseph C. Kolars, Kwabena A. Danso, Peter Donkor, Timothy R. B. Johnson and Cheryl A. Moyer
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:161
  39. The use of online technologies in health professionals’ education, including physiotherapy, has been advocated as effective and well-accepted tools for enhancing student learning. The aim of this study was to ...

    Authors: Aleksandra K. Mącznik, Daniel Cury Ribeiro and G. David Baxter
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:160
  40. This paper is an up-to-date systematic review on educational interventions addressing history taking. The authors noted that despite the plethora of specialized training programs designed to enhance students‘ ...

    Authors: Katharina E. Keifenheim, Martin Teufel, Julianne Ip, Natalie Speiser, Elisabeth J. Leehr, Stephan Zipfel and Anne Herrmann-Werner
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:159
  41. To study the differences in ophthalmology resident training between China and the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR).

    Authors: Alvin L. Young, Vishal Jhanji, Yuanbo Liang, Nathan Congdon, Simon Chow, Fenghua Wang, Xiujuan Zhang, Xiaofei Man, Mingming Yang, Zhong Lin, Hunter GL Yuen and Dennis SC Lam
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:158
  42. Non-adherence to medicines by patients and suboptimal prescribing by clinicians underpin poor blood pressure (BP) control in hypertension. In this study, a training program was designed to enable community pha...

    Authors: Beata V. Bajorek, Kate S. Lemay, Parker J. Magin, Christopher Roberts, Ines Krass and Carol L. Armour
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:157
  43. The hidden curriculum represents influences occurring within the culture of medicine that indirectly alter medical professionals’ interactions, beliefs and clinical practices throughout their training. One app...

    Authors: Agatha Stanek, Chantalle Clarkin, M Dylan Bould, Hilary Writer and Asif Doja
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:156
  44. The ongoing role of colonialism in producing health inequities is well-known. Postcolonialism is a theoretical approach that enables healthcare providers to better understand and address health inequities in s...

    Authors: Allana S. W. Beavis, Ala Hojjati, Aly Kassam, Daniel Choudhury, Michelle Fraser, Renee Masching and Stephanie A. Nixon
    Citation: BMC Medical Education 2015 15:155

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