1.An Assessment of the Effectiveness of Practical in Parasitology for Undergraduate Students Using the Results of Practical Examination.
Kuni IWAI ; Hiroyuki MATSUOKA ; Shigeto YOSHIDA ; Meiji ARAI ; Akira ISHII
Medical Education 2001;32(6):459-462
We assessed the effectiveness of practical instruction in parasitology for undergraduates at Jichi Medical School by examining grades on a practical examination. Two hundred six second-year medical students in 1997 and 1998 (103 students in each year) were enrolled in this study. The students took written and practical examinations at the end of the program. We found that grades on the practical examination were correlated with grades on the written examination (r=0.5664; p<0.001). The discrimination index ranged from 0.23 to 0.78. The percentage of correctly identified species was significantly higher when students studied live specimens than when they used other methods (p<0.0001 in both 1997 and 1998). The highest rates of correct identification (more than 90%) were for Anisakis species larvae and Enterobius vermicularis eggs in 1997 and for Anisakis species larvae, E. vermicularis eggs, and Anopheles mosquitoes in 1998. Results of neither written nor practical examinations differed significantly between students who chose biology at the entrance examination and those who did not. Our results suggest that undergraduates would gain a better understanding of parasitology by studying live specimens.
2.A Study of Support Systems for Women in Medicine: Dual Roles of Professional and Mother
Izumi OKI ; Toshiyuki OJIMA ; Ritei UEHARA ; Miwa KURASAWA ; Haruo NIWA ; Miwako NIWA ; Ayumi TAKAYASHIKI ; Kuni IWAI ; Eiji KAJII
Medical Education 2003;34(5):343-348
We examined issues in balancing professional obligations with family needs, especially parenting, in female physicians. Questionnaires were given to all female physicians who had graduated from Jichi Medical School. Of the 196 graduates, 155 responded (79.1%), and younger graduates accounted for a greater proportion of subjects. Although many female physicians did not live with their parents, female physicians or their parents were usually responsible for caring for children when they become ill. Many respondents demanded better access to day care and greater flexibility in accepting sick children. Female physicians should contribute to society using the knowledge and skills they acquired in medical school; to do so they need support systems in their workplace and child-care services.