Iliffe S, Zwi A
Department of Primary Health Care, University College London School of Medicine, Whittington Hospital, UK.
J R Soc Med. 1994 Sep;87(9):531-5. doi: 10.1177/014107689408700916.
Medical education is in crisis. Undergraduates experience an excessive burden of information, develop attitudes to learning that are based on passive acquisition of knowledge than on curiosity and exploration, and suffer from progressive disenchantment with medicine. There is also a serious problem of providing adequate clinical experience for medical students at existing teaching sites, largely because of reduction in bed numbers, increased patient throughput and clinical specialization. This problem was identified over a decade ago in London but has not been solved by the merger of medical schools. A recent survey in one London teaching hospital showed underemployment of students and limited patient contact. A review of clinical clerkships in an Australian medical school revealed that one-third of teachers were perceived as unconcerned, discouraging, derogatory or hostile, and only one-half were rated as effective educators. One consequence has been the development of a wide-ranging debate on changing medical education. Traditionalists have diminishing room for manoeuvre in defence of existing educational practices, as cautious bodies like the General Medical Council (GMC) opt for fundamental reform.
医学教育正处于危机之中。本科生面临着过多的信息负担,形成了基于被动获取知识而非好奇心和探索的学习态度,并对医学逐渐感到失望。在现有的教学场所为医学生提供足够的临床经验也存在严重问题,这主要是由于病床数量减少、患者周转率提高以及临床专业化。这个问题十多年前就在伦敦被发现,但医学院的合并并未解决。最近在伦敦一家教学医院的一项调查显示,学生就业不足且与患者的接触有限。对澳大利亚一所医学院临床实习的审查发现,三分之一的教师被认为漠不关心、令人气馁、贬低他人或怀有敌意,只有一半被评为有效的教育工作者。结果引发了一场关于变革医学教育的广泛辩论。随着像英国医学总会(GMC)这样谨慎的机构选择进行根本性改革,传统主义者捍卫现有教育实践的回旋余地越来越小。