Understanding the clinical dilemmas that shape medical students' ethical development: questionnaire survey and focus group study

Editorial by Doyal Personal view p 743 During the past 30 years new medical technologies and public concern about medical ethics have led medical schools in Europe and North America to increase their teaching of formal ethics considerably. Most of this teaching focuses on dilemmas that students may face in their future practice, rather than the ethical problems they encounter as medical students. Several studies and editorials suggest that students' clinical experiences constitute an informal or “hidden” ethics curriculum,1 which can undermine their developing professionalism. Clinical teachers who act as negative role models, especially those who show unethical behaviour towards patients, is the most frequently cited problematic aspect of this hidden curriculum.1-5 Previous studies have focused on the prevalence of ethical dilemmas as perceived by students, rather than the nature of the dilemmas that students encounter. 4 5 Our study's premise was that the prevalence and the nature of medical …

[1]  S. Swenson,et al.  Navigating the wards: teaching medical students to use their moral compasses , 1996, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[2]  J. S. Onge Medical education must make room for student-specific ethical dilemmas , 1997 .

[3]  R. Bissonette,et al.  A data‐generated basis for medical ethics education: categorizing issues experienced by students during clinical training , 1995, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[4]  F. Hafferty,et al.  The hidden curriculum, ethics teaching, and the structure of medical education , 1994, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[5]  N. Christakis,et al.  Do clinical clerks suffer ethical erosion? Students' perceptions of their ethical environment and personal development , 1994, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.