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Does professionalism change with different sociodemographic variables? A survey of Arab medical residents

BACKGROUND: Medical professionalism reflects the commitment of physicians to their patients, society, themselves, and the profession. The study examined residents’ attitudes towards professionalism and how these attitudes vary among the different demographic groups, namely gender, specialty, and yea...

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Autores principales: Alfaris, Eiad, Irfan, Farhana, Alosaimi, Fahad D., Shaffi Ahamed, Shaik, Ponnamperuma, Gominda, Ahmed, Abdullah M. A., Almousa, Hisham, Almutairi, Naif, Alwehaibi, Tamim, AlQuaeefli, Mohammad, AlFwzan, Faisal, Alomem, Tareq, Al-Eraky, Mohamed M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9397477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35989634
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2022.2105390
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author Alfaris, Eiad
Irfan, Farhana
Alosaimi, Fahad D.
Shaffi Ahamed, Shaik
Ponnamperuma, Gominda
Ahmed, Abdullah M. A.
Almousa, Hisham
Almutairi, Naif
Alwehaibi, Tamim
AlQuaeefli, Mohammad
AlFwzan, Faisal
Alomem, Tareq
Al-Eraky, Mohamed M.
author_facet Alfaris, Eiad
Irfan, Farhana
Alosaimi, Fahad D.
Shaffi Ahamed, Shaik
Ponnamperuma, Gominda
Ahmed, Abdullah M. A.
Almousa, Hisham
Almutairi, Naif
Alwehaibi, Tamim
AlQuaeefli, Mohammad
AlFwzan, Faisal
Alomem, Tareq
Al-Eraky, Mohamed M.
author_sort Alfaris, Eiad
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Medical professionalism reflects the commitment of physicians to their patients, society, themselves, and the profession. The study examined residents’ attitudes towards professionalism and how these attitudes vary among the different demographic groups, namely gender, specialty, and year of residency. METHODS: A proportionate random sampling strategy was used to select the study sample. Medical residents from six specialties at a large tertiary care teaching facility were invited to participate in an online survey. The survey used the modified Learners Attitude of Medical Professionalism Scale (LAMPS), which consists of five domains: respect, excellence, altruism, duty/accountability, and integrity. Chi-square, Student t-test, one-way ANOVA, factorial ANOVA, and post hoc analysis were used to examine the attitudinal differences towards professionalism among the different demographic factors. RESULTS: The overall response rate was 82.7%. Overall, the residents’ self-reported attitudes towards professionalism was positive. The highest score was for the “respect” domain (4.61), and the lowest was for “altruism” (3.67). No significant association was found between the mean scores and the three studied variables, namely, gender, specialty (surgical/nonsurgical), and level (senior/junior). CONCLUSIONS: No significant differences were observed in the overall attitude towards professionalism among the residents regarding their year of residency, gender, and specialty. The low altruism score and absence of improvement of the total score regarding the residents’ increasing experience in the profession are concerns that need remedial action. Therefore, we suggest that future research look for possible explanations by using multi-institutional surveys that explore not only the residents’ attitudes, but also the trainers’ attitudes and practice, work situations, the hidden curriculum, and culture. KEY MESSAGES: Attitudes towards professionalism among different demographic groups of residents do not show similar variations as has been reported in the literature, albeit in different sociocultural contexts. The low altruism score and absence of improvement of the total score as the residents gained more experience in the profession are concerns that need remedial action. A longitudinal study involving more than one institution for both residents and their faculty members to compare faculty scores with those of residents, while controlling for specialty and gender, may help elucidate the factors affecting attitudes towards professionalism and suggest possible means of addressing unfavourable attitudes.
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spelling pubmed-93974772022-08-24 Does professionalism change with different sociodemographic variables? A survey of Arab medical residents Alfaris, Eiad Irfan, Farhana Alosaimi, Fahad D. Shaffi Ahamed, Shaik Ponnamperuma, Gominda Ahmed, Abdullah M. A. Almousa, Hisham Almutairi, Naif Alwehaibi, Tamim AlQuaeefli, Mohammad AlFwzan, Faisal Alomem, Tareq Al-Eraky, Mohamed M. Ann Med Medical Education BACKGROUND: Medical professionalism reflects the commitment of physicians to their patients, society, themselves, and the profession. The study examined residents’ attitudes towards professionalism and how these attitudes vary among the different demographic groups, namely gender, specialty, and year of residency. METHODS: A proportionate random sampling strategy was used to select the study sample. Medical residents from six specialties at a large tertiary care teaching facility were invited to participate in an online survey. The survey used the modified Learners Attitude of Medical Professionalism Scale (LAMPS), which consists of five domains: respect, excellence, altruism, duty/accountability, and integrity. Chi-square, Student t-test, one-way ANOVA, factorial ANOVA, and post hoc analysis were used to examine the attitudinal differences towards professionalism among the different demographic factors. RESULTS: The overall response rate was 82.7%. Overall, the residents’ self-reported attitudes towards professionalism was positive. The highest score was for the “respect” domain (4.61), and the lowest was for “altruism” (3.67). No significant association was found between the mean scores and the three studied variables, namely, gender, specialty (surgical/nonsurgical), and level (senior/junior). CONCLUSIONS: No significant differences were observed in the overall attitude towards professionalism among the residents regarding their year of residency, gender, and specialty. The low altruism score and absence of improvement of the total score regarding the residents’ increasing experience in the profession are concerns that need remedial action. Therefore, we suggest that future research look for possible explanations by using multi-institutional surveys that explore not only the residents’ attitudes, but also the trainers’ attitudes and practice, work situations, the hidden curriculum, and culture. KEY MESSAGES: Attitudes towards professionalism among different demographic groups of residents do not show similar variations as has been reported in the literature, albeit in different sociocultural contexts. The low altruism score and absence of improvement of the total score as the residents gained more experience in the profession are concerns that need remedial action. A longitudinal study involving more than one institution for both residents and their faculty members to compare faculty scores with those of residents, while controlling for specialty and gender, may help elucidate the factors affecting attitudes towards professionalism and suggest possible means of addressing unfavourable attitudes. Taylor & Francis 2022-08-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9397477/ /pubmed/35989634 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2022.2105390 Text en © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Medical Education
Alfaris, Eiad
Irfan, Farhana
Alosaimi, Fahad D.
Shaffi Ahamed, Shaik
Ponnamperuma, Gominda
Ahmed, Abdullah M. A.
Almousa, Hisham
Almutairi, Naif
Alwehaibi, Tamim
AlQuaeefli, Mohammad
AlFwzan, Faisal
Alomem, Tareq
Al-Eraky, Mohamed M.
Does professionalism change with different sociodemographic variables? A survey of Arab medical residents
title Does professionalism change with different sociodemographic variables? A survey of Arab medical residents
title_full Does professionalism change with different sociodemographic variables? A survey of Arab medical residents
title_fullStr Does professionalism change with different sociodemographic variables? A survey of Arab medical residents
title_full_unstemmed Does professionalism change with different sociodemographic variables? A survey of Arab medical residents
title_short Does professionalism change with different sociodemographic variables? A survey of Arab medical residents
title_sort does professionalism change with different sociodemographic variables? a survey of arab medical residents
topic Medical Education
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9397477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35989634
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2022.2105390
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