Similarities and variances in perception of professionalism among Saudi and Egyptian Medical Students.

Pak J Med Sci

Sultan Ayoub Meo, Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Published: January 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates differing perceptions of professionalism between medical students in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, focusing on the recommended sanctions for various lapses in professional behavior.
  • The research involved an anonymous survey of 750 students from King Saud University, which revealed significant variations in attitudes towards 23 out of 30 specific professional behaviors.
  • Ultimately, the findings suggest that there are more differences than similarities in how professionalism is understood and sanctioned, indicating a culturally influenced perspective on what constitutes professional behavior.

Article Abstract

Background & Objective: Professionalism has a number of culturally specific elements, therefore, it is imperative to identify areas of congruence and variations in the behaviors in which professionalism is understood in different countries. This study aimed to explore and compare the recommendation of sanctions by medical students of College of Medicine, King Saud University (KSU), Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and students from three medical colleges in Egypt.

Methods: The responses were recorded using an anonymous, self-administered survey " Dundee Polyprofessionalism Inventory I: Academic Integrity". In the study 750 medical students of College of Medicine, KSU, Riyadh were invited and a questionnaire was electronically sent. They rated the importance of professionalism lapses by choosing from a hierarchical menu of sanctions for first time lapses with no justifying circumstances. These responses were compared with published data from 219 students from three medical schools in Egypt.

Results: We found variance for 23 (76.66%) behaviors such as "physically assaulting a university employee or student" and "plagiarizing work from a fellow student or publications/internet". We also found similarities for 7 (23.33%) behaviors including "lack of punctuality for classes" and drinking alcohol over lunch and interviewing a patient in the afternoon", when comparing the median recommended sanctions from medical students in Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

Conclusion: There are more variances than congruence regarding perceptions of professionalism between the two cohorts. The students at KSU were also found to recommend the sanction of "ignore" for a behavior, a response, which otherwise was absent from Egyptian cohort.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5216288PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12669/pjms.326.11319DOI Listing

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