Competency-based medical education, here next? / Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rani and Sabariah Abdul Rahman.

Competency Based Medical Education or CBME has been around for decades, the concept was even visualised as early as in the 70s [1, 2] and it has become more prominent and widespread as more evidence and experience guide us in understanding the concept and implementation. CBME to medical educationist...

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Main Authors: Abdul Rani, Mohammed Fauzi, Abdul Rahman, Sabariah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Teknologi MARA Cawangan Selangor 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30068/1/AJ_MOHAMMAD%20FAUZI%20ABDUL%20RANI%20JCHS%20B%2018.pdf
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author Abdul Rani, Mohammed Fauzi
Abdul Rahman, Sabariah
author_facet Abdul Rani, Mohammed Fauzi
Abdul Rahman, Sabariah
author_sort Abdul Rani, Mohammed Fauzi
collection UITM
description Competency Based Medical Education or CBME has been around for decades, the concept was even visualised as early as in the 70s [1, 2] and it has become more prominent and widespread as more evidence and experience guide us in understanding the concept and implementation. CBME to medical educationists in Malaysia is quite new. In the context of medical training, the Malaysian Medical Council (MMC) defines what the attributes of a good doctor are. Customarily we are introduced to ten traits that cover affective, skill and cognitive domains and across multiphases of practice; personal, professional, transdisciplines and grades, and interaction with patients and their relatives [3]. The inculcation of these attributes manifests themselves through the curriculum of a medical school. The wisdom is when a medical school and its curriculum are accredited one can assume that these attributes will manifest in their product, the doctor, through a system of evaluation that consists of many assessment methods. Or expressed in another way, the formulation of a medical curriculum is shaped by the need to ensure medical graduates possess all these attributes. In practice this is done primarily through accreditation of a medical program, the MMC and Malaysian Qualifying Agency (MQA) validate and approve medical education for doctors in training.
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spelling oai:ir.uitm.edu.my:300682020-04-22T04:18:09Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30068/ Competency-based medical education, here next? / Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rani and Sabariah Abdul Rahman. jchs Abdul Rani, Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rahman, Sabariah Medical education. Medical schools. Research Malaysia Competency Based Medical Education or CBME has been around for decades, the concept was even visualised as early as in the 70s [1, 2] and it has become more prominent and widespread as more evidence and experience guide us in understanding the concept and implementation. CBME to medical educationists in Malaysia is quite new. In the context of medical training, the Malaysian Medical Council (MMC) defines what the attributes of a good doctor are. Customarily we are introduced to ten traits that cover affective, skill and cognitive domains and across multiphases of practice; personal, professional, transdisciplines and grades, and interaction with patients and their relatives [3]. The inculcation of these attributes manifests themselves through the curriculum of a medical school. The wisdom is when a medical school and its curriculum are accredited one can assume that these attributes will manifest in their product, the doctor, through a system of evaluation that consists of many assessment methods. Or expressed in another way, the formulation of a medical curriculum is shaped by the need to ensure medical graduates possess all these attributes. In practice this is done primarily through accreditation of a medical program, the MMC and Malaysian Qualifying Agency (MQA) validate and approve medical education for doctors in training. Universiti Teknologi MARA Cawangan Selangor 2018-06 Article PeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30068/1/AJ_MOHAMMAD%20FAUZI%20ABDUL%20RANI%20JCHS%20B%2018.pdf Competency-based medical education, here next? / Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rani and Sabariah Abdul Rahman. (2018) Journal of Clinical and Health Sciences <https://ir.uitm.edu.my/view/publication/Journal_of_Clinical_and_Health_Sciences/>, 3 (1). pp. 1-4. ISSN 0127-984X https://jchs-medicine.uitm.edu.my/index.php
spellingShingle Medical education. Medical schools. Research
Malaysia
Abdul Rani, Mohammed Fauzi
Abdul Rahman, Sabariah
Competency-based medical education, here next? / Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rani and Sabariah Abdul Rahman.
title Competency-based medical education, here next? / Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rani and Sabariah Abdul Rahman.
title_full Competency-based medical education, here next? / Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rani and Sabariah Abdul Rahman.
title_fullStr Competency-based medical education, here next? / Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rani and Sabariah Abdul Rahman.
title_full_unstemmed Competency-based medical education, here next? / Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rani and Sabariah Abdul Rahman.
title_short Competency-based medical education, here next? / Mohammed Fauzi Abdul Rani and Sabariah Abdul Rahman.
title_sort competency based medical education here next mohammed fauzi abdul rani and sabariah abdul rahman
topic Medical education. Medical schools. Research
Malaysia
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30068/1/AJ_MOHAMMAD%20FAUZI%20ABDUL%20RANI%20JCHS%20B%2018.pdf
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