1.A National Survey of Community-Based Medical Education in Japanese Medical Schools (second report)
Yoshihiro KATAOKA ; Tetsuhiro MAENO ; Toshihide AWATANI ; Seitaro IGUCHI ; Kazuo INOUE ; Tetsuhiro OWAKI ; Masanobu OKAYAMA ; Eiji KAJII ; Keisuke TAKEUCHI ; Kenji TANI ; Hitoshi HASEGAWA ; Takahiro MAEDA ; Nobuo MURAKAMI ; Wari YAMAMOTO ; Junichi MISE ; Takefumi KANDA
Medical Education 2017;48(3):143-146
Introduction: Recently, community-based medical education has become widespread in Japanese medical schools, but the current status is not clear on a national level. A second survey of community-based medical education at all Japanese medical schools was conducted. The first survey was done in 2011. Methods: Members of the Council made and distributed a questionnaire to medical schools in order to assess the situation of community-based medical education as of April 2014. Results: A total of eighty schools responded. The number of schools which had community medicine programs was seventy-eight. In the first survey, the number was seventy-three. Seventy-seven schools gave community-based clinical clerkships. Discussion: The number of medical schools that had curriculum about community medicine was more than indicated in the first survey. Further research about the contents or implementation system of community-based clerkships is needed.
2.4. Alignment of the 2022 Revision of the Model Core Curriculum for Medical Education in Japan with the‘Standards of the National Medical Practitioners Qualifying Examination'
Hiroyuki KOMATSU ; Masanaga YAMAWAKI ; Masatomi IKUSAKA ; Masato ETO ; Yasuhiko KONISHI ; Keiichiro SUZUKI ; Shoichi SHIMADA ; Osamu NOMURA ; Yasushi MATSUYAMA ; Harumi GOMI ; Akira YAMAMOTO ; Takeshi ONOUE ; Hitoshi HASEGAWA ; Hideki TAKAMI ; Hitoaki OKAZAKI
Medical Education 2023;54(2):157-163
In this revision, we have attempted to align the Model Core Curriculum for Medical Education competency, "problem-solving ability based on specialized knowledge," with the "Standards of National Examination for Medical Practitioners." The major diseases and syndromes in "Essential Fundamentals" correspond to the basic diseases in Table 1 of the Core Curriculum, symptoms, physical and laboratory examinations, and treatment in "General Medicine" correspond to the items in Table 2 of the Core Curriculum, and the diseases in "Medical Theory" correspond to the diseases in PS-02 of the Core Curriculum. The validity of the diseases in the Core Curriculum was verified using the evaluation results of the examination level classification of the "Research for Revision of National Examination Criteria." Approximately 690 diseases were conclusively selected. This revision mentions the number of diseases in the Core Curriculum for the first time. Hopefully, this will lead to a deeper examination of diseases that should be studied in medical schools in the future.