Results 251 to 260 of about 198,856 (298)
Professionals and the Ethics of Workplace Surveillance
Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
Steve Clarke +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Learning and distraction: Evidence for cognitive load interference in medical education
Abstract Background Distraction may increase cognitive load. Cues may decrease it. But what happens if we cue in distracted learning environments? Does effective instruction buffer against the detrimental effects of distraction? Methods In a 2 × 2 factorial experiment, 117 s–year medical students without prior knowledge watched a standardised ...
Andrea Storck +8 more
wiley +1 more source
Identifying Good Practice in Fitness to Practice Processes in Higher Education Institutes in Scotland [PDF]
Haycock-Stuart, Elaine +3 more
core
openaire +1 more source
Dances with doves, hawks and eagles: Realising the potential of emotion during simulation
Medical Education, Volume 59, Issue 4, Page 357-359, April 2025.
Russell Peek
wiley +1 more source
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Medicine, 2016
Medicine is an ever-changing science. Since this book was first published in 2006, there have been major advances in many aspects of medicine. In this second edition, medical cases, diagnostic approaches and treatment modalities have been brought up to date, in keeping with advances in medical science.
Kwan, SKJ, Chen, JY
openaire +4 more sources
Medicine is an ever-changing science. Since this book was first published in 2006, there have been major advances in many aspects of medicine. In this second edition, medical cases, diagnostic approaches and treatment modalities have been brought up to date, in keeping with advances in medical science.
Kwan, SKJ, Chen, JY
openaire +4 more sources
Medical students' professionalism
Medical Teacher, 2006Shapiro et al. (2006) in this issue report on an innovative medical student elective entitled ‘Teaching the art of doctoring’.
openaire +2 more sources
Restoring medical professionalism
Neurology, 2012The essence of medical professionalism is placing dedication to the welfare of patients above physicians' personal or proprietary interests. Medicine has become deprofessionalized as a consequence of socioeconomic factors leading to increasing commercialization and perverse financial incentives converting it into a business, the presence of unmanaged ...
openaire +2 more sources

