<p>SaudiMEDs and CanMEDs frameworks: similarities and differences</p>
Author(s) -
Asem Shadid,
Amro K. Bin Abdulrahman,
Abdulmajeed Bin Dahmash,
Abdulrahman Yousef Aldayel,
Muteb Mousa Alharbi,
Abdullah Alghamdi,
Abdulaziz Al Asmri,
Hamad Qabha,
Mansour Al Madi,
Mohammad Al Masri,
Saleh Al Ayony,
Yasir Al Otaibi,
Yazeed Al Mutari,
Yousef Bukhari,
Khalid A. Bin Abdulrahman
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advances in medical education and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1179-7258
DOI - 10.2147/amep.s191705
Subject(s) - curriculum , medical education , similarity (geometry) , quality (philosophy) , core competency , medicine , psychology , computer science , pedagogy , management , artificial intelligence , philosophy , epistemology , economics , image (mathematics)
The SaudiMEDs framework was founded and adopted by the Saudi Deans' Committee in 2011 to ensure that Saudi medical graduates learned core competencies. Meanwhile, CanMEDs was established by the Canadian Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1996 and aimed to establish the abilities and skills of all aspects of medical practice, as well as to ensure the acquisition of basic knowledge related to medical education. The main purpose of this study was to explore the similarities and differences between both frameworks. In March and April 2017, 15 researchers conducted an extensive review of both the SaudiMEDs and CanMEDs frameworks using a semi-quantitative evaluation with color codes to determine the following: the exact similarities in both frameworks, the close similarities, and the unique differences. According to the coloring system, most of the frameworks were similar. For example, Leadership, Communication and Professionalism were almost identical in both frameworks. There was some degree of similarity between both frameworks in "Collaborator". Furthermore, the SaudiMEDs framework had a unique input which involved the most essential skills that undergraduate medical students must acquire. SaudiMEDs has great potential to improve the quality of Saudi medical graduates in a manner that fits our current and future needs. CanMEDs focuses mainly on outcomes and processes, while SaudiMEDs focuses more on outcomes. SaudiMEDs was not created to provide a copy-and-paste curriculum. The ultimate goal was to create an outcome-based curriculum that ensures the quality of Saudi medical school graduates.
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