The perception of the hidden curriculum on medical education: an exploratory study

  • Murakami M
  • Kawabata H
  • Maezawa M
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Abstract

Major curriculum reform of undergraduate medical education occurred during the past decades in the United Kingdom (UK); however, the effects of the hidden curriculum, which influence the choice of primary care as a career, have not been sufficiently recognized. While Japan, where traditionally few institutions systematically foster primary care physicians and very few have truly embraced family medicine as their guiding discipline, has also experienced meaningful curriculum reform, the effect of the hidden curriculum is not well known. The aim of this study is to identify themes pertaining to the students' perceptions of the hidden curriculum affecting undergraduate medical education in bedside learning in Japan.

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Murakami, M., Kawabata, H., & Maezawa, M. (2009). The perception of the hidden curriculum on medical education: an exploratory study. Asia Pacific Family Medicine, 8(1), 9. https://doi.org/10.1186/1447-056x-8-9

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