Medical Science Educator Volume 20: No. 3

Message from Editor-in-Chief

Peter G.M. de Jong, Ph.D.

Issue 20-3 of JIAMSE is a very special issue in several ways. First of all, every article in this issue focuses on the role of the basic sciences in modern… Read more »

A Solid Building Requires a Good Foundation: The Basic Sciences in the Dutch Medical Curriculum, 1865-1965

Eugène J. F. M. Custers & Olle Th. J. ten Cate

ABSTRACT

This article discusses the development of premedical and preclinical education in the Netherlands between 1865, when the ‘unity of licensure’ was achieved, and 1965, a year which marked the beginning of a series of innovations which resulted in a complete overhaul of the classical medical curriculum. It will be argued that Dutch premedical and preclinical education during the century between 1865 and 1965 was featured by a comprehensive treatment of the natural and preclinical sciences in order to provide students with a ‘solid foundation’ upon which their clinical knowledge and, eventually, their clinical competence should be built. However, the curriculum suffered from several major shortcomings: it was educationally insufficient, it lacked internal dynamics, it was extremely compartmentalized, and it became increasingly overloaded. As a consequence of both rigid legislation and an obsolete educational philosophy, these curricular shortcomings could not adequately be dealt with. Consequently, in the early 1960s, when the number of medical students exploded, the curriculum more or less imploded under its own weight. New legislation and the foundation of two new medical schools in the 1960s and 1970s, which could design their curriculum almost ‘from scratch,’ finally paved the way for implementing the major curricular innovations at the time already long overdue.

The Role and Value of the Basic Sciences in Medical Education (with an Emphasis on Biochemistry)

Stephen G. Chaney1, John W. Pelley2 & William E. Seifert3

ABSTRACT

Biochemistry is one of the foundational or basic sciences that enable competent physicians to balance the art of medicine with rational, science-based medicine. It is important to the medical curriculum because it is a fundamental discipline for learning other foundational sciences, it teaches how scientific reasoning can be applied to clinical decision making, and provides a framework for solving clinical problems that require molecular insights. While Biochemistry is usually introduced into the first-year of the medical curriculum, competency in applying biochemical principles in the solution of clinical problems is best achieved when they are integrated vertically throughout the four-year curriculum and presented in a clinical context using active-learning strategies. Medical students will be better prepared to learn, understand and apply biochemical principles if they have some prior exposure to some combination of biochemistry, cell biology, molecular biology and genetics during their undergraduate education.

Abraham Flexner: The Value of Medical Microbiology and Immunology as Foundation Sciences in Medical Education

Floyd C. Knoop, Alan Biel & Kirsten A. Larson

ABSTRACT

One hundred years ago a professional educator, Abraham Flexner, published a lengthy Report on the status of medical education in the United States and Canada. The Report underscored, among other criteria, the critical need for fundamental basic science courses including medical microbiology and immunology. In view of modern complexities, including threats of emerging pathogens, drug resistant microbes, bioterrorism, autoimmune diseases and cancer immunotherapy, we have examined anew the Flexner Report to assess the importance of Medical Microbiology and Immunology in medical education and their relation to clinical medicine.

THE NEUROSCIENCE PERSPECTIVE

Bruce W. Newton & R. Lee Archer

What Sciences Constitute the Foundation for Medical Practice? The Flexner Report clearly showed the practice of medicine has its foundation in the basic sciences. Empirical observations gave way to scientific… Read more »

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