Zamboanga Medical School Foundation Curriculum
The ZMSF curriculum was initiated and developed around the philosophy of
Problem Based Learning and Community Oriented Medical education. The students
are exposed to real or simulated problems arranged around themes of learning.
Immediately after each tutorial session the students are exposed to real
patients, clinics and the community. These exposures are intended to highlight
the concept of the practice of medicine as applied not only to individuals, but
also to a group of people and/or population. Close to fifty percent of the
four year program is based in the community. The fourth year is entirely spent
in the community implementing health programs for health development through
intersectoral approaches. Likewise , each students implements an interventional
research. This latter component in their training is meant to help provide a
data base for the community and likewise intervene an existing health problem in
the community through research. The vision of the medical schools is as follows:
The ZMSF envisions a medical school whose curriculum combines competency and
problem based instruction with experiential learning in the community,
responsive to the changing patterns of health care development and the needs of
communities, sensitive to the social and cultural realities of Western Mindanao
and imbued with the belief that we exist not only for ourselves but also for
others.
EDUCATIONAL STRATEGY
The entire four year program is designed around the concept of learning
through problems and management of those problems. Small group learning composed
of eight (8) students is utilized as they have been documented to be the core of
PBL ( Albanese & Mitchell, 1993; Barrows and Tamblyn, 1980; Norman &
Schmidt, 1992). Table 1 outlines the division structure of the curriculum into
learning modules. These form the base for the case problems.
THE INTEGRATED EDUCATIONAL HELIX
The paradigm shift indicated by the use of the discipline integrated learning
modules is structured in a triple helix philosophy that was designed by the
school developers. All subjects are integrated into a spiral design. Figure 7
describes the triple helix model used to guide the integration and development
of the program content. A series of working problem is presented in an iterative
fashion so that learning of progressively more complex material is achieved.
Ongoing exposure to similar working problems serves to reinforce
prior knowledge and link new knowledge. The central cylinder represents the
collated clinical problems into which the student integrates the various
disciplines in the context of the problem on hand.
STRAND DESCRIPTIONS
Although the curriculum approach is mainly based on learning through problem
solving , it consists of three ( 3 ) learning strands, each running parallel
with maximum integration along a spiral or iterative progression. These three
strands of the helix are in themselves unique even as they attempt to integrate
all the facets of learning within each of the proposed learning modules and
arrange them in an increasingly complex format. The three strands are 1) Working
problem Strand; 2) Professional skill Strand and 3) Population Strand. The whole
concept behind the helix is to discard the discipline barriers and to create a
meta-discipline or meta-paradigm in which all the information is learnt in
relation to a problem case.
WORKING PROBLEMS
The working problem strands involves not only solutions to clinical problems
but also very importantly it looks at the method of problem analysis. This
strand is the student centered problem based tutorial sessions. Using a
hypothetical-didactive approach, the underlying mechanisms of the disease is
discussed by drawing information from Basic and Clinical science disciplines.
Pertinent unanswered questions during the tutorial become learning issues that
propel the students to gather additional information from various sources
between tutorial sessions. These information are subsequently shared to the
group in the next session. The process culminates in the understanding of the
problem in three perspectives namely 1) Biological perspective , which looks at
the basic and clinical sciences as they relate to the disease or problems
proposed; 2) the Behavioral perspective, which looks at the impact of the
problem/s on the individual family and the community. Incorporated within this
approach are the psychological implications, ethical dilemmas with regards to
decision making and the actual personal relationship of the doctors to the
patients involved. The third perspective is the population medicine, is the
multifaceted arena in which the sociological , anthropological, political and
economic impacts of the disease are encompassed.
PROFESSIONAL SKILLS
This strand involves sessions where experimental and practical applications
of the working problem strands. Communication skills, physical examination and
therapeutic regiments are and other diagnostic skills and treatment techniques
are taught.
The communication skills extend from interviewing to counseling patients
including the parents and relatives of the patients. This strand proposes to
built on the knowledge learnt from the working problem strand and apply
practical experience both in role-play and experiential setting to the
repertoire of the students. For instance , if the cardio- vascular problems are
being tackled in the tutorial sessions, the skills to be taken in the
professional skills strand include cardiac auscultation, cardiac radiology,
reading of electro-cardiograph tracings.
POPULATION STRAND
This strand has important implication for the students and their future
professional practice in the Philippines. It focuses on the practice of medicine
as applied to a group or population and not only to geographic community. Its
importance lies in its focus on population and groups not only on the ill
individuals but more importantly, that health issues affect the whole
communities. Working problems which starts from a discussion of an isolated
individual problem is brought to a discussion that tackles the wider and broader
issues of health. Inclusive within this strand is the idea of future planning
and therefore preventative and protective medicine and development of health.
LEARNING PHASES
The curriculum is implemented in (8 ) PHASES , each composed of learning
units. Under each units, are series of modules .
PHASE 1 INTERFACING
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It is presumed that students accepted into our medical program
are baccalaureate graduates of conventional approaches in education and
learning. This phase therefore prepares the students to cope with the transition
from the traditional or conventional methods of teaching to the current medical
curriculum as implemented in this institution. |
PHASE 2 OVERVIEW OF
MEDICINE |
This phase presents a total overview of the scope of medicine
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PHASE 3 PHYSICIAN'S
ROLES |
This phase introduces the students to the science of medicine
providing him/her a broad perspective to their subsequent roles and the scope of
their responsibilities. |
PHASE 4 DOH PRIORITY
PROBLEMS |
The ten leading causes of mortality and morbidity as reported by
the Department of Health ( DOH), like Trauma, Infection, Infestations, Maternal
Child Health are taken up to ensure that the students are prepared to face the
realities of community health problems, thus enabling them to a certain extend,
function as students doctors already. |
PHASE 5 OTHER ORGAN
SYSTEM PROBLEMS |
This phase is devoted to other problems of the adult and
children arranged by organ systems, starting from simple system progressing to a
multi-systemic problem of acute and chronic diseases. |
PHASE 6 CLINICAL
CLERKSHIP |
This phase involves the clinical rotation of students in the 4
major departments of the hospitals ( Pediatrics, Surgery, Obstetrics-Gynecology,
Internal Medicine) and a few minor departments (Ophthalmology, ENT, Orthopedics,
Radiology, Laboratory Medicine , Pathology) |
PHASE 7 COMMUNITY
BASED CLERKSHIP |
This involves students being assigned to their respective
communities for their community based medical health services and research for
12 months. This exposure is not new to them as they have been previously exposed
to this same community on a month long exposure per semesters in the previous
years. The only difference is that by now they are in the community for an
extended period. This meant for the final and full implementation of their
health programs which has been previously started. This phase provides the
students the actual opportunity to integrate and apply all professional skills
in the context of medical practice in the community setting.
|
PHASE 8 POST
GRADUATE INTERNSHIP |
This phase is part of the government 's requirement to do the
post graduate clinical internship prior to taking the certified Board
Examination for Medicine. Here the students spend 6 months in a medical center
accredited by the APMC, and the remaining 6 months rotating in provincial,
municipal hospitals, and Health centers. This is meant to provide the students a
full appreciation of the total spectrum of the delivery health care system of
the Philippines. |
STUDENT EVALUATIONS AND RETENTIONS
The curriculum of the ZMSF puts the learner and not the teacher in the center
of its educational process. To facilitate the development of this curricular
goal, the educational program is well defined by using very explicit educational
objectives along with quality criterion-reference evaluation probes.
At the beginning of each modular course, the tutors spells out the modular
goals ( Terminal Objectives , Enabling objectives, and Case Domain) including
the competencies a student must demonstrate as a result of the course
experience.
As specified, are the assessments techniques that will be used and the
criteria upon which the student work will be judged. e.g. MCQ, Short answer
Essay, OSCE, Projects outputs, Research. Grades are reduced to a three point
system of Excellence, Satisfactory and Unsatisfactory. Elements of surprise or
secrecy are modes discouraged in this system. The students in this curriculum do
not compete with other students for marks or grades. Rather, students compete
with the present MPL ( Minimum Passing Level) and are encouraged to score above
the MPL as high as possible on each examination to ensure higher level of
competency. Consequently, students tend to support each other, study in groups,
and learning tends to be enjoyable, while anxieties and stresses are
minimized. |