Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2885647793> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2885647793 endingPage "161" @default.
- W2885647793 startingPage "139" @default.
- W2885647793 abstract "Pain management is a major health care challenge in terms of the significant prevalence of pain and the negative consequences of poor management. Consequently, there have been international calls to improve pain medicine education for medical students. This systematic review examines the literature on pain medicine education at medical schools internationally, with a particular interest in studies that make reference to: a defined pain medicine curriculum, specific pain medicine learning objectives, dedicated pain education modules, core pain topics, medical specialties that teach pain medicine, elective study opportunities, hours allocated to teaching pain medicine during the curriculum, the status of pain medicine in the curriculum (compulsory or optional), as well as teaching, learning, and assessment methods. A systematic review was undertaken of relevant studies on pain medicine education for medical students published between January 1987 and May 2018 using PubMed, Medline, Excerpta Medica database (EMBASE), Education Resources Information Center (ERIC), and Google Scholar, and Best Evidence Medical Education (BEME) data bases. Fourteen studies met the inclusion criteria. Evaluation of pain medicine curricula has been undertaken at 383 medical schools in Australia, New Zealand, the United States of America (USA), Canada, the United Kingdom (UK), and Europe. Pain medicine was mostly incorporated into medical courses such as anaesthesia or pharmacology, rather than presented as a dedicated pain medicine module. Ninety-six percent of medical schools in the UK and USA, and nearly 80% of medical schools in Europe had no compulsory dedicated teaching in pain medicine. On average, the median number of hours of pain content in the entire curriculum was 20 in Canada (2009), 20 in Australia and New Zealand (2018), 13 in the UK (2011), 12 in Europe (2012/2013), and 11 in the USA (2009). Neurophysiology and pharmacology pain topics were given priority by medical schools in all countries. Lectures, seminars, and case-based instruction were the teaching methods most commonly employed. When it was undertaken, medical schools mostly assessed student competency in pain medicine using written examinations rather than clinical assessments. This systematic review has revealed that pain medicine education at medical schools internationally does not adequately respond to societal needs in terms of the prevalence and public health impact of inadequately managed pain." @default.
- W2885647793 created "2018-08-22" @default.
- W2885647793 creator A5009679447 @default.
- W2885647793 creator A5017014235 @default.
- W2885647793 creator A5047738633 @default.
- W2885647793 creator A5056131415 @default.
- W2885647793 creator A5061448699 @default.
- W2885647793 creator A5067660039 @default.
- W2885647793 date "2018-07-30" @default.
- W2885647793 modified "2023-09-28" @default.
- W2885647793 title "Systematic Review of Pain Medicine Content, Teaching, and Assessment in Medical School Curricula Internationally" @default.
- W2885647793 cites W140272104 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W149541698 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1518166510 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1519546779 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1583000582 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1709965646 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1748921979 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1851821528 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1936447388 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1961113709 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1964121823 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1965140297 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1966613755 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1967219995 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1978626885 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1983955214 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1998686910 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W1999741890 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2003229247 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2010582889 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2020027866 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2023505562 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2023977753 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2030698008 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2047706424 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2075995580 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2078791882 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2082594285 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2084567915 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2094388148 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2101577705 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2104818454 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2109672373 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2112773265 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2113795189 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2117502536 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2119481955 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2119903161 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2125875438 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2127163015 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2134477924 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2135656200 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2139001711 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2140130615 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2143841439 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2146714341 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2150618433 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2151608993 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2153564455 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2156492853 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2163840523 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2167613032 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2213749855 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2316607732 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2396440930 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2400786876 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2414220739 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2482573644 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2581979991 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2587269980 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2589248684 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2608142241 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2791324021 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2806430062 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W2807011773 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W4244581912 @default.
- W2885647793 cites W83028466 @default.
- W2885647793 doi "https://doi.org/10.1007/s40122-018-0103-z" @default.
- W2885647793 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6251835" @default.
- W2885647793 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30058045" @default.
- W2885647793 hasPublicationYear "2018" @default.
- W2885647793 type Work @default.
- W2885647793 sameAs 2885647793 @default.
- W2885647793 citedByCount "55" @default.
- W2885647793 countsByYear W28856477932019 @default.
- W2885647793 countsByYear W28856477932020 @default.
- W2885647793 countsByYear W28856477932021 @default.
- W2885647793 countsByYear W28856477932022 @default.
- W2885647793 countsByYear W28856477932023 @default.
- W2885647793 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2885647793 hasAuthorship W2885647793A5009679447 @default.
- W2885647793 hasAuthorship W2885647793A5017014235 @default.
- W2885647793 hasAuthorship W2885647793A5047738633 @default.
- W2885647793 hasAuthorship W2885647793A5056131415 @default.
- W2885647793 hasAuthorship W2885647793A5061448699 @default.
- W2885647793 hasAuthorship W2885647793A5067660039 @default.
- W2885647793 hasBestOaLocation W28856477931 @default.