“Between a Rock and a Hard Place” : The discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculum

The last two decades of medical education have been marked by a persistent push towards curricular reform. Anatomy as a discipline, the unshakable foundation of medical teaching for hundreds of years, has been at the centre of this development. Although it is widely agreed that for doctors to be com...

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Main Authors: Ibrahim M Inuwa, Varna Taranikanti, Maimouna Al-Rawahy, Sadhana Roychoudhry, Omar Habbal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sultan Qaboos University 2012-02-01
Series:Sultan Qaboos University Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/squmj/article/view/1645
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spelling doaj-54ce3bf6c41a41bea8e82753a6022dc02020-11-25T03:25:58ZengSultan Qaboos UniversitySultan Qaboos University Medical Journal 2075-051X2075-05282012-02-0112119241570“Between a Rock and a Hard Place” : The discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculumIbrahim M Inuwa0Varna Taranikanti1Maimouna Al-Rawahy2Sadhana Roychoudhry3Omar Habbal4Department of Human & Clinical Anatomy, College of Medicine & Health Sciences, Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Oman.Department of Human & Clinical Anatomy, College of Medicine & Health Sciences, Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Oman.Department of Human & Clinical Anatomy, College of Medicine & Health Sciences, Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Oman.Department of Human & Clinical Anatomy, College of Medicine & Health Sciences, Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Oman.Department of Human & Clinical Anatomy, College of Medicine & Health Sciences, Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Oman.The last two decades of medical education have been marked by a persistent push towards curricular reform. Anatomy as a discipline, the unshakable foundation of medical teaching for hundreds of years, has been at the centre of this development. Although it is widely agreed that for doctors to be competent, they need an adequate knowledge of anatomy underpinning medicine, there is much less agreement over the quantity required, and who should decide and define it. Many clinicians feel medical students are being under-trained in this basic medical science before reaching the clinical stages. Professional accreditation boards advocate the reduction of factual information in undergraduate medical courses. Anatomists complain of a progressive erosion of the time allocated to the subject. Caught in the midst of this controversy is the student of anatomy who is left bewildered and confused about what is required from him to become a safe and competent health professional. The way forward might, first, be for medical schools to facilitate discussions between students, anatomy professors, and clinicians to bring these divergent perspectives into alignment. Second, the anatomists need to re-invent themselves in two principal frameworks: first, to present the subject in the context within which it will be utilised by the student, and second to employ the overwhelming learning tool of today, i.e. technology, in their teaching and assessment of the subject.https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/squmj/article/view/1645anatomycurriculumundergraduatemedical education.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ibrahim M Inuwa
Varna Taranikanti
Maimouna Al-Rawahy
Sadhana Roychoudhry
Omar Habbal
spellingShingle Ibrahim M Inuwa
Varna Taranikanti
Maimouna Al-Rawahy
Sadhana Roychoudhry
Omar Habbal
“Between a Rock and a Hard Place” : The discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculum
Sultan Qaboos University Medical Journal
anatomy
curriculum
undergraduate
medical education.
author_facet Ibrahim M Inuwa
Varna Taranikanti
Maimouna Al-Rawahy
Sadhana Roychoudhry
Omar Habbal
author_sort Ibrahim M Inuwa
title “Between a Rock and a Hard Place” : The discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculum
title_short “Between a Rock and a Hard Place” : The discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculum
title_full “Between a Rock and a Hard Place” : The discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculum
title_fullStr “Between a Rock and a Hard Place” : The discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculum
title_full_unstemmed “Between a Rock and a Hard Place” : The discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculum
title_sort “between a rock and a hard place” : the discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculum
publisher Sultan Qaboos University
series Sultan Qaboos University Medical Journal
issn 2075-051X
2075-0528
publishDate 2012-02-01
description The last two decades of medical education have been marked by a persistent push towards curricular reform. Anatomy as a discipline, the unshakable foundation of medical teaching for hundreds of years, has been at the centre of this development. Although it is widely agreed that for doctors to be competent, they need an adequate knowledge of anatomy underpinning medicine, there is much less agreement over the quantity required, and who should decide and define it. Many clinicians feel medical students are being under-trained in this basic medical science before reaching the clinical stages. Professional accreditation boards advocate the reduction of factual information in undergraduate medical courses. Anatomists complain of a progressive erosion of the time allocated to the subject. Caught in the midst of this controversy is the student of anatomy who is left bewildered and confused about what is required from him to become a safe and competent health professional. The way forward might, first, be for medical schools to facilitate discussions between students, anatomy professors, and clinicians to bring these divergent perspectives into alignment. Second, the anatomists need to re-invent themselves in two principal frameworks: first, to present the subject in the context within which it will be utilised by the student, and second to employ the overwhelming learning tool of today, i.e. technology, in their teaching and assessment of the subject.
topic anatomy
curriculum
undergraduate
medical education.
url https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/squmj/article/view/1645
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