Medical students' attitudes towards cancer: Influence of the type of clerkship experience

Attitudes of third‐year medical students relative to patients with cancer were assessed prior to and following three different 6‐week pediatric clerkships. Clerkship I (N = 139) was conducted in a public hospital where student contact with all patients occurred in wards, supervised by pediatricians...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical and pediatric oncology 1988, Vol.16 (3), p.175-181
Hauptverfasser: Hays, Daniel M., Hoffman, Kaaren I., Williams, Kenneth O., Siegel, Stuart E., Miller, Robert
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container_end_page 181
container_issue 3
container_start_page 175
container_title Medical and pediatric oncology
container_volume 16
creator Hays, Daniel M.
Hoffman, Kaaren I.
Williams, Kenneth O.
Siegel, Stuart E.
Miller, Robert
description Attitudes of third‐year medical students relative to patients with cancer were assessed prior to and following three different 6‐week pediatric clerkships. Clerkship I (N = 139) was conducted in a public hospital where student contact with all patients occurred in wards, supervised by pediatricians in all subspecial‐ties. Clerkship II (N = 146) was in a pediatric hospital which is a cancer center. Contact with patients with cancer was directed by oncologists and nononcologists. Clerkship III (N = 31) was similar to II, with an exposure to an oncology ward. A 51‐item instrument, employing a visual analog scale, which included general, adult, and pediatric items, was used (pre‐ & postclerkship) to evaluate attitudes in all 316 students and 49 faculty instructors associated with the clerkships. Factor analysis of student responses to pediatric items resulted in four factors: a) early diagnosis, b) aggressive therapy, c) long‐range surveillance, and d) psychosocial support in reference to patients with cancer. Post‐test differences between clerkship groups in items a and b were noted, with increasing positivity correlated with increased exposure to oncology and oncologists. Attitudes of faculty non‐oncologists differed significantly from those of oncologists irrespective of institutional affiliation.
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Attitude of Health Personnel
Attitude to Health
Biological and medical sciences
cancer education
Clinical Clerkship
education
Education, Medical, Undergraduate
exposure to oncology
Faculty, Medical - psychology
General aspects
Hospitals, General
Hospitals, Special
Humans
Medical Oncology - education
Medical sciences
Neoplasms - psychology
oncology
Pediatrics - education
student attitudes
Students, Medical - psychology
Tumors
title Medical students' attitudes towards cancer: Influence of the type of clerkship experience
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