2008, Number 6
Rev Med Inst Mex Seguro Soc 2008; 46 (6)
Teaching Practices and the Position Concerning Medical Education
Medina-Figueroa AM, Espinosa-Alarcón PA, Viniegra-Velázquez L
Language: Spanish
References: 10
Page: 691-696
PDF size: 97.47 Kb.
ABSTRACT
Objective: estimate the degree of development of a position concerning medical education, in a phisician population.Methods: we carried out a cross-sectional study at with 1580 physicians; we selected 395 participants by non-proportional stratified sampling of an IMSS health facility; 244 (62 %) was medical professors, included 15 physicians responsible for education A previously validated instrument was applied to these participants. Three indicators were evaluated: agreement in general, most popular trend, and consequence. Group grading was done blindly. Kuder-Richardson test was utilized to calculate the value of internal instrument consistency and nonparametric statistics ‹ 0.05.
Results: answering tendency in agreement were similar among physicians; heads or managers were statistically significant. The most popular trend was participative. In terms of consequence in physicians, there were some without consequent sentences in pair.
Conclusions: the most popular trend was participative, although it would appear that this has not been pondered, in that on exploring the indicator, that of consequence. Teaching practices do not have any significant influence on the development of a position concerning medical education.
REFERENCES