Exploring barriers to teaching behavioural and social sciences in medical education.

Med Educ

Division of Primary Care, School of Population, Community and Behavioural Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.

Published: March 2008

Context: Tomorrow's Doctors provides guidance about what is considered core knowledge for medical graduates. One core area of knowledge identified is the individual in society: graduates are required to understand the social and cultural environments in which medicine is practised in the UK. Yet, despite the presence of the behavioural and social sciences (B&SS) in medical curricula in the UK for the past 30 years, barriers to their implementation in medical education remain.

Objective: This study sought to discover medical educators' perceptions of the barriers to the implementation of B&SS.

Methods: Medical educationalists in all UK medical schools were asked to complete a survey identifying what they felt were the barriers they had experienced to the implementation of B&SS teaching in medical education.

Results: A comparison of our findings with the literature revealed that these barriers have not changed since the implementation of B&SS in medical education. Moreover, the barriers remain similar across medical schools with differing ethos and strategies.

Conclusions: Various agendas within the hidden curricula create barriers to effective B&SS learning in medical education and thus need further exploration and attention.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2923.2007.02951.xDOI Listing

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