1 / 18

Medical Professionalism

Medical Professionalism. Amna AL- Futaisi MD, FRCPC, FRCPCH Pediatric Neurology, Department of Child Health. Definition.

vina
Download Presentation

Medical Professionalism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Medical Professionalism Amna AL-Futaisi MD, FRCPC, FRCPCH Pediatric Neurology, Department of Child Health

  2. Definition • Professional competence is the habitual and judicious use of communication, knowledge, technical skills, clinical reasoning, emotions, values, and reflection in daily practice for the benefit of the individual and community being served. • Epstein and Hundert (1)

  3. Medical Professionalism • Professionalism: a contract between medicine and society

  4. Attributes of professionalism • Professional Responsibility • Competence and Self-Improvement • Respect for Others and Professional Relationships • Social Responsibility • Honesty • Health • Function under stress • Appearance • Tolerance • Dependability • Research Ethics

  5. Professional Responsibility • The student is internally motivated to place the patient’s concerns before his or her own. • He or she always helps to create a positive learning environment • Punctual • Attends all activities at which he or she is expected. • Reliable in completing tasks related to the care of patients

  6. Competence and Self-Improvement • Students to be committed to learning and mastery of medical knowledge, skills, attitudes and beliefs. • The motivation for this learning is always the optimal future care of patients. • The student knows the limits of his or her abilities, and always tries to improve.

  7. Respect for Others and Professional Relationships • Medical students always respect their patients as individuals.  • There is respect for the patient’s dignity, privacy, cultural values and confidentiality.  • Students demonstrate sensitivity, respect, compassion, emotional support and empathy at all times—to patients, as well as their families, other health care team members and their peers.

  8. Social Responsibility • Societies place physicians in positions of power and authority, with control over patients’ and their families’ well-being, as well as over their lives. • We must always conduct ourselves in a manner worthy of that trust

  9. Honesty • Medical students are committed to honesty at all times, including their interactions with: • Patients • Patient’s families • Other professional colleagues • Peers

  10. Health • Students have a responsibility to assess the impact of their own physical and mental health on their fitness to work. • They should seek medical consultation for all health problems from a qualified professional. • Report Health issues that may put others at risk

  11. Function understress • The student must maintain professional composure and exhibits good personal and clinical judgment in stressful situations. 

  12. Appearance • Displays appropriate professional appearance • Appropriately groomed • Students must comply with the university dress code

  13. Tolerance • The student is expected to demonstrate ability to accept people and situations.

  14. Dependability • Students must complete tasks promptly and well. • They should arrive on time and actively participates in clinical and didactic activities.

  15. Altruism • Altruism is the devotion to others through complete forgetfulness of ones own concerns. • It is very important that doctors help patients without expecting any benefits or self gain from doing so. • Our own needs should be suppressed when it comes to the welfare of a patients health. • Societal pressures and administrative needs must not compromise this principle.

  16. Research Ethics • Plagiarism is the presentation of someone else’s work as your own. • If you use another author’s words you must attribute the work to its original source (its author, composer, etc.). • If you borrow an idea from, or directly quote from, another person’s work, you must cite the source of that idea or quote.

  17. Summary From University of California Guidelines

  18. Conclusion • These values form the basis for a moral contract between the medical profession and society. • Each party has an obligation to strengthening the system of healthcare on which our collective human dignity depends. • Professionalism is about understanding and knowing how to relate to people

More Related