Background: Self-efficacy is crucial in improving medical students' communication skills. This study aims to clarify where medical students' self-efficacy is greatest following an interview with a simulated patient and subsequent feedback.
Methods: A total of 162 medical students (109 men, 53 women) in their fourth or fifth year at a university in Japan participated in this study.
Methoxy trityl groups are acid-responsive protecting groups that are routinely used in the process of nucleoside analog synthesis. This study investigated the potential of methoxy trityl groups, monomethoxy trityl (MMT), dimethoxy trityl (DMT), and trimethoxy trityl (TMT), as acid-responsive substituents for designing anti-cancer cytidine analog prodrugs. For this purpose, we synthesized six gemcitabine (GEM) derivatives, which were modified either 4-(N)- or 5'-(O)-sites with MMT, DMT, and TMT, as candidates for anti-cancer cytidine analog prodrugs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective To examine the characteristics of the communication skills of medical students, we observed their performance during introductory medical interview training with simulated patients (SPs). Methods The subjects of the present study included fifth-year medical students (male, n=180, female, n=99) who were undergoing clinical training in Japan from 2012 to 2014. Each student was assigned to one of four 10-minute clinical scenarios, which was conducted with an SP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTreatment with an epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitor (egfri) in patients having non-small-cell lung cancer can cause frequent and diverse skin toxicities, an acneiform rash being one of the commonest. Although the exact pathophysiology of this rash and its development mechanisms remain unknown, investigators have noted that egfri-induced skin toxicity might be partly associated with sebaceous gland function. Sebum is composed mainly of the lipids squalene (sq), wax ester (we), triglyceride, free fatty acid, and cholesterol, which are secreted mostly from the sebaceous glands and by keratinocytes.
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