从土耳其大学专家的角度看法医学教育、压力因素和聚众滋扰感之间的关系

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q3 MEDICINE, LEGAL
Cemil Çelik , Uğur Ata , Murat Kamalak , Naile Esra Saka
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引用次数: 0

摘要

引言当前的形势需要科学的数据来说明,以确保和提高专科培训的质量。本研究对土耳其法医学专业教育领域的教育质量、教师能力、压力因素、聚众滋扰及其相互联系进行了研究。调查内容包括核心教育课程中包含的问题、教育者的特点以及对压力和聚众闹事的看法。结果72.7%的研究对象完成了调查。近一半的参与者(46.3%)认为教师数量不足。指导教师的素质(科学能力、教育和教学技能、人际关系、亲和力、管理和解决问题的能力)被认为部分足够(平均 = 3.36)。约有三分之一的受访者表示,教师对其专业培训的贡献最大,而持相反意见的受访者比例要高得多。就核心课程中的主题所接受的教育为部分充分水平(平均值 = 3.04)。据观察,指导教师的特征、所教课题的充分性得分和对聚众滋扰的感知之间存在显著关系(p <0.01)。指导教师特征的充分性得分对住院医师培训所授内容的充分性评分有 1.02 倍的影响。在受访者中,76.9%的人表示在专科培训期间遇到过压力因素,其中最常见的压力因素(52.2%)是培训项目中的组织混乱。结论教育与教师资格相关,但压力因素和聚众闹事对教育产生了不利影响。教育、教员、压力因素和聚众滋扰之间存在密切联系。因此,有必要建立独立、客观的审计机构,负责核实教育机构是否符合既定的教育标准。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Relationship between forensic medicine education, stress factors, and mobbing perception from the perspective of specialists in Turkey's universities

Introduction

The current situation needs to be presented with scientific data to ensure and improve the quality of specialist training. This study examined the quality of education, instructor competence, stress factors, mobbing, and their interconnections in the domain of forensic medicine specialty education in Turkey.

Materials and methods

This cross-sectional study was conducted through an anonymous, web-based survey targeting forensic medicine specialists who have completed their specialist training in university forensic medicine departments within the last three years. The survey consisted of questions regarding issues included in the core education curriculum, educator characteristics, and perceptions of stress and mobbing. Based on the responses provided, the relationships between these factors were statistically analysed.

Results

72.7 % of the study population completed the survey. Nearly half of the participants (46.3 %) did not consider the number of instructors adequate. The quality of instructors (scientific competence, educational and teaching skills, interpersonal relations, accessibility, management, and problem-solving abilities) was determined to be partially sufficient (mean = 3.36). Approximately one-third of the respondents indicated that instructors made the greatest contribution to their specialist training, whereas the proportion of those who said otherwise was much higher. Education received for topics included in the core curriculum was partially sufficient level (mean = 3.04). It was observed that there was a significant relationship between the instructor characteristics, sufficiency score of the taught topics, and perception of mobbing (p < 0.01). The sufficiency scores of instructor characteristics had a 1.02-fold impact on sufficiency ratings of the topics covered in residency training. Among the respondents, 76.9 % reported encountering stress factors during their specialty training, with the most frequently exposed stress factor (52.2 %) being disorganisation within the training program. Among the participants, 22.8 % reported experiencing mobbing.

Conclusions

Education and instructor qualifications were correlated; however, stress factors and mobbing adversely affected education. A close association was observed between education, instructors, stressors, and mobbing. Thus independent and objective auditors tasked with verifying whether institutions meet the established educational standards need to be established.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
106
审稿时长
57 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine publishes topical articles on aspects of forensic and legal medicine. Specifically the Journal supports research that explores the medical principles of care and forensic assessment of individuals, whether adult or child, in contact with the judicial system. It is a fully peer-review hybrid journal with a broad international perspective. The Journal accepts submissions of original research, review articles, and pertinent case studies, editorials, and commentaries in relevant areas of Forensic and Legal Medicine, Context of Practice, and Education and Training. The Journal adheres to strict publication ethical guidelines, and actively supports a culture of inclusive and representative publication.
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