A systematic scoping review of undergraduate medical ethics education programs from 1990 to 2020.
Mun Kit WongDaniel Zhi Hao HongJiaxuan WuJacquelin Jia Qi TingJia Ling GohZhi Yang OngRachelle Qi En TohChristine Li Ling ChiangCaleb Wei Hao NgJared Chuan Kai NgClarissa Wei Shuen CheongKuang Teck TayLaura Hui Shuen TanYun Ting OngMin ChiamAnnelissa Mien Chew ChinStephen R MasonLalit Kumar Radha KrishnaPublished in: Medical teacher (2021)
This review reveals the importance of adopting an interactive, multimodal and interdisciplinary team-teaching approach to ethics education, involving community resource partners and faculty trained in ethics, law, communication, professionalism, and other intertwining healthcare professions. Conscientious effort should also be put into vertically and horizontally integrating ethics into formal medical curricula to ensure contextualisation and application of ethics knowledge, skills and attitudes, as well as protected time and adequate resources. A stage-based multimodal assessment approach should be used to appropriately evaluate knowledge acquisition, application and reflection across various practice settings. To scaffold personalised development plans and remediation efforts, multisource evaluations may be stored in a centralised portfolio. Whilst standardisation of curricula content ensures cross-speciality ethical proficiency, deliberative curriculum inquiry performed by faculty members using a Delphi approach may help to facilitate the narrowing of relevant topics.