1000 resultados para médecine traditionnelle
Resumo:
The Faculty of Biology and Medicine of Lausanne has integrated education of family medicine all along its new undergraduate medical curriculum. The Institute of general medicine is in charge to implement those offers among which two are presented hereafter. In the new module "Generalism" several courses cover the specificities of the discipline as for example medical decision in the practice. A mandatory one-month internship in the medical practice offers an experiential immersion into family medicine for all students. In a meeting at the end of their internship, students discuss in group with their peers their individual experiences and are asked to identify, based on their personal experience, the general concepts of the specialty of family medicine and general practice.
Resumo:
Clinical practice in internal medicine has fundamentely changed over the last decade. Our knowledge has dramatically improved and we are facing new types of patients. Their number is increasing, they are older and suffer from increasingly complex medical conditions. The society has evolved as well therefore transforming our daily practice. This implies important modifications of our role and new challenges. We must also develop new aspects of our practice such as recognizing our errors, quality of care, quality of education, ethics, new strategies for taking care of the patient all this in parallel with continuous education. Our role as (general practitioner) is of utmost importance since it enables us to keep the "big pictures" in a more and more specialized environment.
Resumo:
Since 2011, second year medical students from Lausanne University follow a single day course in the community health care centers of the Canton of Vaud. They discover the medico-social network and attend to patients' visits at home. They experience the importance of the information transmission and the partnership between informal caregivers, professional caregivers, general practitioner and hospital units. The goal of this course is to help the future physicians to collaborate with the community health care centers teams. This will be particularly important in the future with an aging and more dependant population.
Resumo:
Les recherches qualitatives dans les sciences de la santé sont de plus en plus nombreuses, cependant elles restent difficiles à publier et font souvent l'objet d'une moindre reconnaissance de la part des commanditaires et/ou des experts des revues. Devant cet état de fait, les chercheurs anglo-saxons ont développé un ensemble de grilles et critères qui devraient permettre d'établir les « standards » de qualité d'une recherche qualitative. Dans un premier temps, les auteurs proposent un bref état des lieux concernant les critères de qualité de la recherche qualitative dans les sciences de la santé. Dans un deuxième temps, ils présentent huit grilles, dont la traduction française est inédite, issues de la psychologie/psychiatrie et de la médecine générale. Les auteurs mettent en perspective ces grilles et montrent les difficultés à trouver des accords dans les définitions des critères entre les divers auteurs. Ces difficultés mettent en évidence l'écart entre ces grilles tant au point de vue de l'épistémologie qui les sous-tend, qu'au point de vue des critères retenus (nombre, type, forme, contenus). Les différences entre elles correspondent à la diversité des paradigmes auxquels se réfèrent les créateurs des grilles, sans jamais le mentionner explicitement dans leurs textes de référence. Les auteurs concluent que l'augmentation des travaux de recherche et des publications de type qualitatif n'a pas permis de dépasser les difficultés à établir des critères définis et partagés, et que cette grande hétérogénéité des concepts soulève des problèmes majeurs, non seulement méthodologiques, mais surtout épistémologiques et théoriques.
Resumo:
The Swiss postgraduate training program in general internal medicine is now designed as a competency-based curriculum. In other words, by the end of their training, the residents should demonstrate a set of predefined competences. Many of those competences have to be learnt in outpatient settings. Thus, the primary care physicians have more than ever an important role to play in educating tomorrows doctors. A competency-based model of training requires a regular assessment of the residents. The mini-CEX (mini-Clinical Evaluation eXercise) is the assessment tool proposed by the Swiss institute for postgraduate and continuing education. The mini-CEX is based on the direct observation of the trainees performing a specific task, as well as on the ensuing feedback. This article aims at introducing our colleagues in charge of residents to the mini-CEX, which is a useful tool promoting the culture of feedback in medical education.
Resumo:
This review is based on five articles published in 2006 and dealing with therapies in general internal medicine: in case of acute non complicated rhino-sinusitis, the use of topical corticoids in mono-therapy is indicated; cross-reactivity between penicillins and cephalosporins is less frequent than established so far. In our daily practice we should be more "pro-active" in prescribing probiotics which have proved their efficacy in the prevention of antibiotic-associated diarrhoeas; an antibiotic treatment of three days is recommended in case of non complicated cystitis in women less than 65 years of age. Finally, every patient treated with bisphosphonates must be regularly followed by a dentist.
Resumo:
The current lack of general practitioners in Switzerland is the result of health care policy which aimed in the past years to reduce the number of medical students and physicians in private practice. Furthermore, during the past decades, the Swiss Medical Schools emphasized on the transmission of medical care by specialists and neglected primary care medicine. The Faculty of medicine at the University of Lausanne recently decided to renew the curriculum. The Department of ambulatory care and community medicine (Policlinique Médicale Universitaire) of Lausanne is committed to the elaboration of this move. The biomedical model, essential to the acquisition of clinical competence, is still taught to the students. Nevertheless, from the beginning to the end of the curriculum, an emphasis is now put on the clinical skills and the clinical reasoning.