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Parisky, Alex – ProQuest LLC, 2015
The purpose of this qualitative case study was to better understand the implementation of educational technology in selected medical schools. This study utilized Rogers' Diffusion of Innovation theory to investigate the perspectives of educational technology leaders at four different medical schools in the United States. In the coming years,…
Descriptors: Medical Schools, Case Studies, Leaders, Attitudes
West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, 2016
West Virginia's three state funded medical schools enroll more medical students per capita than any other state in the country. In the academic year 2015-2016, 168 of the 402 medical students who enrolled in the first year classes of the state's three medical schools were West Virginia residents. This report provides information on health sciences…
Descriptors: Access to Health Care, Public Health, Medical Schools, Health Sciences
West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, 2015
This report card provides information on major health sciences and rural health schools in West Virginia including: (1) Medical School Profiles; (2) Medical Licensure Examinations; (3) Medical Student Indebtedness; (4) Residency Training; (5) Medical School Graduate Retention; (6) Other Health Sciences Program Graduates; (7) Loans and Incentives;…
Descriptors: Access to Health Care, Public Health, Medical Schools, Health Sciences
Sarikaya, Ozlem; Civaner, Murat; Vatansever, Kevser – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2009
It is known that interaction between pharmaceutical companies and medical professionals may lead to corruption of professional values, irrational use of medicine, and negative effects on the patient-physician relationship. Medical students frequently interact with pharmaceutical company representatives and increasingly accept their gifts.…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Medical Education, Marketing, Drug Therapy
Feeley, Thomas Hugh; Anker, Ashley E.; Soriano, Rainier; Friedman, Erica – Communication Education, 2010
Medical students at Mount Sinai School of Medicine participated in an intervention designed to promote knowledge and improved communication skills related to cadaveric organ donation. The intervention required students to interact with a standardized patient for approximately 10 minutes and respond to questions posed about organ donation in a…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Students, Patient Education, Intervention
Marcus, Tessa S. – Multicultural Learning and Teaching, 2011
The ?"biopsychosocial model"? is the education paradigm of knowledge that is expected to inform medical practice. Yet in medical education, medical science is the gold standard. Social science barely features in the formal curriculum, and when it does, it is considered best done through experiential learning. This paper analyses…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Medical Education, Case Studies, Experiential Learning
West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, 2014
Throughout the past year, the Division of Health Sciences has tackled several issues unique to West Virginia, ranging from conducting focus groups with medical students to improvements in the Health Sciences scholarship program. The progress made over the past year has ushered in new projects and developments for the Division of Health Sciences…
Descriptors: Access to Health Care, Public Health, Medical Schools, Health Sciences
West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, 2013
As the healthcare landscape in West Virginia evolves, West Virginia's health professions programs are working closer together than ever to improve citizen's health and access to care. In particular, the state's three academic health centers, the Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine at Marshall University, the West Virginia School of Osteopathic…
Descriptors: Access to Health Care, Public Health, Medical Schools, Health Sciences
Stenger, Joseph; Cashman, Suzanne B.; Savageau, Judith A. – Journal of Rural Health, 2008
Context: Small towns across the United States struggle to maintain an adequate primary care workforce. Purpose: To examine factors contributing to physician satisfaction and retention in largely rural areas in Massachusetts, a state with rural pockets and small towns. Methods: A survey mailed in 2004-2005 to primary care physicians, practicing in…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Community Characteristics, Municipalities, Physicians
Schwartz, Myron R. – Journal of Rural Health, 2008
Context: An implicit objective of a state's investments in medical education is to promote in-state practice of state educated physicians. Purpose: To present a tool for evaluating this objective by analyzing the "pipeline" from medical education to patient care, primary care, rural areas, and underserved areas in Pennsylvania. Methods:…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Physicians, Rural Areas, Primary Health Care
Bornman, Juan; Alant, Erna; Lloyd, Lyle L. – Education and Training in Developmental Disabilities, 2007
Primary health care nurses are frequently overlooked when delivering services to children with developmental disabilities, despite the fact that they are often the first contact many primary caregivers have with rehabilitation professionals and usually remain the bridge between caregivers and professionals. A time series one group design with…
Descriptors: Primary Health Care, Caregivers, Nurses, Communication Skills
Halaas, Gwen Wagstrom; Zink, Therese; Finstad, Deborah; Bolin, Keli; Center, Bruce – Journal of Rural Health, 2008
Context: Founded in 1971 with state funding to increase the number of primary care physicians in rural Minnesota, the Rural Physician Associate Program (RPAP) has graduated 1,175 students. Third-year medical students are assigned to primary care physicians in rural communities for 9 months where they experience the realities of rural practice with…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Physicians, Public Health, Family Practice (Medicine)
Swinglehurst, D.; Russell, J.; Greenhalgh, T. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2008
This paper describes a collaborative action research approach used to explore peer observation of teaching (POT) within the online environment. Although POT has become familiar in face-to-face teaching contexts, little is understood of its potential role in online settings. We conducted "virtual" focus groups to explore the experience…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Professional Development, Peer Relationship, Observation
Juszczak, Linda; Schlitt, John; Moore, Aisha – National Assembly on School-Based Health Care, 2007
The National Assembly on School-Based Health Care conducted the 2004-05 Census, the tenth count of school-based health centers (SBHCs) since 1986, to: (1) provide a better understanding of the role of SBHCs in meeting the needs of underserved children and adolescents; (2) collect up-to-date data on demographics, staffing services, operations,…
Descriptors: School Health Services, Health Personnel, Program Descriptions, Patients
Brace-Govan, Jan; Gabbott, Mark – Educational Technology & Society, 2004
Continuing professional education seems to be particularly suited to the online environment with opportunities to communicate anywhere anytime. This appears to be convenient and time efficient for the busy working professional. The views of practising professionals were sought and form the basis of this paper. Primary care physicians at two…
Descriptors: Physicians, Professional Continuing Education, Information Technology, Medical Education