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Basic Curricular Goals in Medical Ethics
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1985
Year
NursingTeacher EducationMedical EthicsTeachingEducational EthicsBasic Curricular GoalsFormal TeachingCurriculum CommitteeEducationEthical AnalysisBioethicsHealthcare EthicEthics Of CareTeaching EthicMedicineProfessional EthicEthic Education
Over the past 15 years, formal ethics instruction in medical schools has expanded, yet curricula differ widely in emphasis, format, and content, leading to diverse and sometimes problematic teaching practices. Current medical ethics curricula show no evolution toward a national standard. No additional information.
Formal teaching of ethics in the medical school curriculum has increased greatly during the past 15 years. Yet, schools vary in how much attention they give the subject, and even those that do offer courses vary considerably in the form and content of their curricula. Although the result has been a notable degree of innovation and creativity in teaching methods, the diversity has also created certain impressions that require close scrutiny. A medical school dean or curriculum committee surveying the current state of education in medical ethics might conclude that nothing has evolved that might serve as a national standard . . .