Attitude change during medical school: a cohort study
Top Cited Papers
- 1 May 2004
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Medical Education
- Vol. 38 (5) , 522-534
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2929.2004.01820.x
Abstract
Attitudes influence behaviour. Developing and maintaining proper attitudes by medical students can impact on the quality of health care delivered to their patients as they assume the role of doctors. There is a paucity of longitudinal research reports on the extent to which students' attitude scores shift as they progress through medical school. This study examined the change in attitude scores of a large student cohort as they progressed through medical school. Whether student gender is related to attitude change was also investigated. Medical students from 3 consecutive classes (1999-2001) participated in this study. Students completed 2 instruments that included the Attitudes Toward Social Issues in Medicine and an in-house tool referred to as the Medical Skills Questionnaire. The instruments were administered at 3 milestones during the course of medical school training (entry, end of preclinical training and end of clerkship). Reliability estimates for total (0.82-0.91) and subscale (0.41-0.81) attitudinal scores were in the acceptable range. Multivariate analyses of variance of mean attitudinal scores indicated a persistent decline in several attitude scores as students progressed through the medical educational programme. Females demonstrated higher attitude scores than males. As students progress through medical school their attitude scores decline. The reasons for the shift in attitude scores are not clear but they may relate to a ceiling of high attitude scores at entry, loss of idealism and the impact of the unintended curriculum. Further study of the impact of medical education on student attitudes is warranted.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of a Revised Preclinical Curriculum on Students' Perceptions of Their Cognitive Behaviors, Attitudes to Social Issues in Medicine, and the Learning EnvironmentTeaching and Learning in Medicine, 2003
- The Loss of Student Idealism in the 3rd-Year Clinical ClerkshipsEvaluation & the Health Professions, 2001
- Long-term Outcomes of the New Pathway Program at Harvard Medical SchoolAcademic Medicine, 2000
- Attitudes towards community medicine: a comparison of students from traditional and community-oriented medical schoolsMedical Education, 1999
- Comparing studentsʼ attitudes in problem-based and conventional curriculaAcademic Medicine, 1996
- A longitudinal investigation of changes in medical students’ attitudes toward the elderlyTeaching and Learning in Medicine, 1995
- The influence of the New Pathway curriculum on Harvard medical studentsAcademic Medicine, 1994
- Social issues in medicine: a follow-up comparison of senior-year medical students' attitudes with contemporaries in non-medical facultiesMedical Education, 1988
- Maintenance of psychosocial attitudes in medical studentsSocial Science & Medicine, 1985
- A conceptual model for attitude assessment in all areas of medical educationAcademic Medicine, 1978