A Phenomenological Study of Italian Students' Responses to Professional Dilemmas: A Cross-Cultural Comparison.


Journal

Teaching and learning in medicine
ISSN: 1532-8015
Titre abrégé: Teach Learn Med
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 8910884

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Historique:
pubmed: 12 10 2018
medline: 28 7 2019
entrez: 11 10 2018
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Phenomenon: Medical professionalism is a complex construct, based in social and cultural influences, yet little research has been done to show how culture influences the behaviors and attitudes of medical students. We presented Italian students with the same professional dilemmas used in a previous Canadian and Taiwanese cross-cultural study to look for similarities and differences and detect elements of Italian culture that influenced how students responded to dilemmas. The aim was to provide medical educators with some insights into students' behavioral strategies and feelings when faced with a professional dilemma. Approach: Using Giorgi's method, we performed a phenomenological analysis of 15 interviews of Italian medical students who responded to standardized video scenarios representing professional dilemmas. These videos were used in Canada and Taiwan and were translated into Italian. All students were from the same degree course, at Year 6, and were recruited on a voluntary basis at the beginning of the Internal Medicine course. Interview transcripts were anonymized before analysis. Findings: Scenarios were perceived as realistic and easy to envision in Italy. Four themes emerged: establishing priority among principles, using tactics to escape the dilemma, defending the self, and defending the relationships. When compared with previous studies, we noted that Italian students did not mention the principles of reporting inappropriate behavior, seeking excellence, or following senior trainees' advice. Insights: This is the first cross-cultural study of professionalism that involves a Mediterranean country and the observed differences could be interpreted as expressions of Italian cultural traits: distrust toward authority and a cooperative rather than competitive attitude. These findings have practical implications for educators to design and run curricula of professionalism with culturally appropriate topics. They highlight the need for more cross-cultural research.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30303399
doi: 10.1080/10401334.2018.1478731
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

44-52

Auteurs

Fabrizio Consorti (F)

a Department of Surgical Sciences , University Sapienza of Rome , Rome , Italy.

Shiphra Ginsburg (S)

b Department of Medicine and Scientist , Wilson Centre for Research in Education and Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto , Toronto , Ontario , Canada.

Ming J Ho (MJ)

c Department of Medical Education & Bioethics , National Taiwan University , Taipei , Taiwan.

Laura Potasso (L)

d Department of Medicine II , University Hospital Freiburg , Freiburg , Germany.

Emanuele Toscano (E)

e Department Technologies, Communication and Society - TECOS , University G. Marconi , Rome , Italy.

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