Okoye Onochie, Nwachukwu Daniel, Maduka-Okafor Ferdinand C
Department of Ophthalmology, College of Medicine, University of Nigeria, Ituku-Ozalla, Enugu, Enugu State, Nigeria.
Department of Physiology, University of Nigeria, Enugu Campus, Enugu, Nigeria.
BMC Med Ethics. 2017 Dec 8;18(1):73. doi: 10.1186/s12910-017-0229-2.
As the practice of medicine inevitably raises both ethical and legal issues, it had been recommended since 1999 that medical ethics and human rights be taught at every medical school. Most Nigerian medical schools still lack a formal undergraduate medical ethics curriculum. Medical education remains largely focused on traditional medical science components, leaving the medical students to develop medical ethical decision-making skills and moral attitudes passively within institutions noted for relatively strong paternalistic traditions. In conducting a needs assessment for developing a curriculum germane to the Nigerian society, and by extension most of Sub-Saharan Africa, this study determined the views of Nigerian medical students on medical ethics education, ethical issues related to the doctor-patient relationship and the ethical/professional dilemmas they are confronted with.
Using self-administered 63-item structured questionnaires, a cross-sectional survey of the final year medical students of the University of Nigeria was conducted in July 2015.Using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences software (SPSS Version 17), frequency counts and percentages were generated.
The sample included 100 males (71.4%) and 40 females (28.6%), with the respective mean (SD) age being 24.6(5.61) and 21.8 (6.38) years. Only 35.7% were satisfied with their medical ethics knowledge, and 97.9% indicated that medical ethics should be taught formally. Only 8.6% had never witnessed a medical teacher act unethically. The dilemmas of poor communication between physicians and patients, and the provision of sub-standard care were reported highest for being encountered 'often'. A majority (60.7%) indicated that "a doctor should do his best always, irrespective of the patient's wishes". No significant difference in responses across gender was noted.
There is a strong desire by the contemporary Nigerian medical student for medical ethics education. Their lack of exposure in medical ethics in an ethically challenging environment suggest a dire need for the development of an appropriate medical ethics curriculum for them and the provision of an ethically conducive learning environment.
由于医疗实践不可避免地会引发伦理和法律问题,自1999年以来一直建议在每所医学院校教授医学伦理学和人权。大多数尼日利亚医学院校仍然缺乏正式的本科医学伦理学课程。医学教育在很大程度上仍侧重于传统医学科学内容,使得医学生在以相对强烈的家长式传统著称的机构中被动地培养医学伦理决策技能和道德态度。在开展一项针对制定适合尼日利亚社会乃至撒哈拉以南非洲大部分地区的课程的需求评估时,本研究确定了尼日利亚医学生对医学伦理学教育、医患关系相关伦理问题以及他们所面临的伦理/职业困境的看法。
2015年7月,使用自行填写的63项结构化问卷,对尼日利亚大学最后一年的医学生进行了横断面调查。使用社会科学统计软件包(SPSS版本17)生成频数和百分比。
样本包括100名男性(71.4%)和40名女性(28.6%),各自的平均(标准差)年龄分别为24.6(5.61)岁和21.8(6.38)岁。只有35.7%的人对自己的医学伦理学知识感到满意,97.9%的人表示医学伦理学应该进行正式教学。只有8.6%的人从未目睹过医学教师有不道德行为。报告称医生与患者之间沟通不良以及提供不合格护理的困境“经常”遇到的比例最高。大多数人(60.7%)表示“医生应该始终尽最大努力,无论患者的意愿如何”。未发现不同性别之间的回答有显著差异。
当代尼日利亚医学生对医学伦理学教育有强烈需求。他们在充满伦理挑战的环境中缺乏医学伦理学方面的接触,这表明迫切需要为他们制定合适的医学伦理学课程,并提供一个有利于伦理学习的环境。