1.Medical students' perceptions of community medicine: A comparative study between students of quotas related to community medicine and regular admission
Asumi Oguchi ; Yu Kitamura ; Masaru Nagase ; Keigo Mizuno ; Koji Tsunekawa ; Rintaro Imafuku ; Nobuo Murakami ; Takuya Saiki
Medical Education 2015;46(5):419-424
Few studies have examined medical students' perceptions of community medicine and specialty choice through comparison between students of quotas related to community medicine and regular admission. We conducted a questionnaire survey on students' desire for future work places, types of health facility/hospital, medical specialization, and community medicine involving year 1 to year 5 students in Gifu University School of Medicine (n=335, selective admission: regular admission=81:254) . This study demonstrated that the selected students for community medicine (years 1 to 5) preferred to work at a core/small-sized hospital in a rural area and tended to choose the specialties that were characterized by primary care, such as pediatrics. Moreover, they had positive perceptions of community medicine. Further follow-up study needs to be undertaken in order to explore how students are actually engaging in community medicine after graduation.
2.Factor Structure of the Targeted Inventory on Problems in Schizophrenia.
Shoji TANAKA ; Takanori NAGASE ; Takefumi SUZUKI ; Kensuke NOMURA ; Hiroyoshi TAKEUCHI ; Shinichiro NAKAJIMA ; Hiroyuki UCHIDA ; Gohei YAGI ; Koichiro WATANABE ; Masaru MIMURA
Clinical Psychopharmacology and Neuroscience 2013;11(1):18-23
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to explore the factor structure of a novel, 10-item rating scale, the Targeted Inventory on Problems in Schizophrenia (TIP-Sz). Determining the factor structure will be useful in the brief evaluation of medication and non-medication treatment of the disease. METHODS: An exploratory factor analysis was performed on TIP-Sz scores obtained from 100 patients who met the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) criteria for schizophrenia. RESULTS: The factor analysis extracted four factors that were deemed clinically pertinent, which we labeled: disorganization, social cooperativeness, functional capacity, and emotional state. The items exhibited cross-loadings on the first three factors (i.e., some items loaded on more than one factor). In particular, the 'behavioral dyscontrol and disorganization,' 'insight and reality testing,' and 'overall prognostic impression' items had comparable cross-loadings on all of the first three factors. The emotional state factor was distinct from the other factors in that the items loading on it did not cross-load on other factors. CONCLUSION: The TIP-Sz scale comprises factors that are associated with the psychosocial functioning and emotional state of patients, which are important outcome parameters for successful treatment of the disease.
Anomie
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Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
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Humans
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Schizophrenia