Premium
Health promotion projects: skill and attitude learning for medical students
Author(s) -
Jones K V
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
medical education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.776
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1365-2923
pISSN - 0308-0110
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2923.1999.00438.x
Subject(s) - health promotion , medical education , promotion (chess) , unit (ring theory) , public health , health education , medicine , psychology , nursing , public relations , politics , political science , mathematics education , law
Objectives The aim of this health promotion project is to introduce students to appropriate skills and attitudes – as well as knowledge about health promotion strategies and methods. As part of this process, standardized procedures have been established to ensure that the projects are scientifically and ethically appropriate and adequately supervised. This project‐centred course introduces the discipline of health promotion to third‐year medical students at Monash University. It is aimed at introducing students to the range of health promotion concepts, providing them with experience of health promotion activities and involving them in consideration of the scientific, political and ethical issues arising from doctors’ participation in health promotion. Design As the major learning and assessment component of the unit, students participate in self‐selected project groups of three to five students. Each group develops a topic for a health promotion activity in the community, carries out that project and presents the results as a poster as well as a written report. Setting Monash University. Subjects Third‐year medical students. Results Sixty per cent of each student’s mark for the unit is based on the project. The posters produced by the project groups are placed on public display in a major teaching hospital for a week at the end of the unit. Public display of the posters helps each student to appreciate the variety of possible health promotion activities, and to appreciate health promotion as a scientific discipline. It also makes the project findings available to the public. Conclusions Student evaluation of the project, and community response to the projects – especially the poster display – indicate that the project is both a highly effective learning experience and a health‐promoting activity in its own right.