Background: Boosting the individual learning passion of medical students is a novel approach to improve their academic performance. It facilitates the medical education reform, motivating both policymakers and educators to focus on the function of positive psychology in the career development of medical students. Therefore, this study aimed (1) to assess the status of two types of learning passion; (2) to clarify the relationship between self-esteem and two types of learning passion among Chinese medical students; (3) to examine the mediating role of psychological capital (PsyCap) in the relationship between self-esteem and two types of learning passion, respectively; and (4) to identify the moderating role of professional identity in the relationship between PsyCap and two types of learning passion, respectively.
Methods: A cross-sectional online survey was conducted from April to June 2016 in China. A total of 1,218 valid questionnaires (effective completion rate: 67.93%) were collected from four medical schools.
Results: Self-esteem significantly and positively influenced medical students' PsyCap (β = 0.637, < 0.01) and two types of learning passion, including harmonious learning passion (β = 0.589, < 0.01) and obsessive learning passion (β = 0.436, < 0.01). PsyCap fully mediated the relationship (β = 0.578, < 0.01) between self-esteem and harmonious learning passion positively, whereas it suppressed the relationship (β = 0.490, < 0.01) between self-esteem and obsessive learning passion. Further, professional identity significantly moderated the correlation between PsyCap and harmonious learning passion (β = -0.554, < 0.05), rather than obsessive learning passion ( 0.05).
Conclusion: Two types of learning passion of medical students are positively influenced by self-esteem and PsyCap. Medical students with high-level self-esteem should possess strong PsyCap, which augments their harmonious as well as obsessive learning passion. Moreover, the positive effect of medical students' PsyCap on harmonious learning passion is more notable among those with a lower professional identity. Finally, this study argues that strengths-based interventions of self-esteem and PsyCap are a beneficial approach for future enhancing learning passion in the domain of medical education.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.758002 | DOI Listing |
Healthc Q
October 2024
Jillian Brooke, is the senior director of Occupational Health, Safety and Wellness at SE Health, and based in Lakeshore, ON. She has published several articles in peer-reviewed journals and participated in provincial and national guideline and standard development. Drawing on her lived experience, Jillian is passionate about fostering a supportive environment for working caregivers and is actively involved with the Canadian Centre for Caregiving Excellence's Working Caregivers Project.
Workplace mental health is a critical concern. Forty per cent of healthcare workers experience burnout, half intend to leave the profession and only 60% express satisfaction with the quality of care they provide. These statistics highlight the urgency for innovative and holistic approaches to support well-being within healthcare organizations.
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September 2024
Pathology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Baha University, Saudi Arabia.
Background: To develop a method for designing the ethics and professionalism compatible with the integrative medical curriculum. So that the insertion of ethics and professionalism should start from the initial stages of the integrative program in an indirect manner through student-centered activities, passing through introducing some ethical topics that are appropriate for each module, developing a condensed module at the beginning of the clinical stage, and ended by developing a practical course in the internship period. In this way, a four-dimensional model to present ethics and professionalism has been introduced.
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Ashley Bell, PhD, RN, OCN, CNE, is an associate professor of nursing at Missouri Baptist University. Her clinical passions include oncology nursing and spiritual care. She enjoys providing transformational learning experiences that encourage students to integrate their faith into practice.
The integration of faith and learning (IFL) in nursing has deep historical roots. However, barriers have developed to successful IFL in Christian higher education. A biblically based concept curriculum (BBCC) is proposed that emphasizes deep learning, critical thinking, and student-centered learning.
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V. Chopra is professor of medicine, Robert W. Schrier Chair of Medicine, Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado; ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8670-9376.
Past medical education scholarship has explored what to teach, how to teach it better, and the evaluation of what these efforts provide learners. Missing from this dialogue has been the question of what clinician-educators gain from teaching. In this Invited Commentary on Frija-Gruman and colleagues' article "Learning Through Teaching: How Physicians Learn Medicine in Authentic Clinical Contexts," the authors go beyond how and what clinician-educators learn through teaching to what drives clinicians to teach while caring for patients.
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December 2024
Authors' Affiliation: Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing, University of California, Davis, California.
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