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Medical Teacher | 2017

The truth lies somewhere in the middle: Swinging between globalization and regionalization of medical education in Japan

Takuya Saiki; Rintaro Imafuku; Yasuyuki Suzuki; Nobutaro Ban

Abstract Japan is well known as a super-aging society, with a low birth rate, and has been ranked as one of the countries having the highest quality of healthcare system. Japan’s society is currently approaching a major turning point with regard to societal and healthcare reforms, which are influenced by international trends and regional needs. Development of Japanese healthcare human resources, including medical students, is now expected to ride the wave of globalization, while resolving regional problems in the training and delivery of healthcare. Terms and global trends in medical education, such as outcome-based education, community-based education, reflective learning, international accreditation of medical education, and professionalization of educators are well translated into the Japanese language and embraced positively among the Japanese medical educators. However, these trends occasionally sit uncomfortably with cultural variations that are often a common approach in Japan; notably, “hansei” (introspection) and “kaizen” (change for the better). In the world facing a new era where people are unsettled between globalism and regionalism, Japan’s future mission is to steer a balanced route that recognizes both global and regional influences and produce global health professionals educators.


BMC Medical Education | 2017

Dental hygienists’ perceptions of professionalism are multidimensional and context-dependent: a qualitative study in Japan

Yukiko Nagatani; Rintaro Imafuku; Toshinobu Takemoto; Tadayuki Waki; Taiji Obayashi; Tetsuji Ogawa

BackgroundDue to the declining birth rate and aging of Japanese society, the roles and responsibilities of dental hygienists are continuously expanding. Medical professionalism needs to be pursued continuously throughout one’s career in order to improve dental care and treatment. Although conceptualising professionalism is essential to the education of health professionals, professionalism in the field of dental hygiene has not been defined or adequately examined in Japan. The purposes of this study are to investigate dental hygienists’ perceptions of the constituent elements of professionalism and the factors affecting their perceptions.MethodsSemi-structured interviews were conducted with 18 dental hygienists in Japan. Drawing on the conceptualisation of professionalism in medicine described by Van de Camp et al., the transcribed data were thematically analysed.ResultsThe dental hygienists in this study perceived 70 constituent elements that were categorised into eight core competencies related to professionalism. These competencies were further classified into three main themes: intrapersonal, interpersonal, and public professionalism. There were three sociohistorical factors that affected their perceptions of the constituent elements, namely academic background (university or technical school), the contexts of any previously provided dental care (university hospital or dental clinic), and their social interactions with their colleagues during their engagement in dental practice (dental team or interprofessional team). Moreover, according to their sociohistorical backgrounds, the dental hygienists saw themselves variously as scholars (university graduates), facilitators (university hospital), skillful artisans (dental clinic), or collaborators (interprofessional team).ConclusionsDental hygienists’ perceptions of professionalism are multidimensional and context-dependent, so culture- and professional-specific elements need to be included in educational curricula and continuing professional development programmes. In particular, the conceptualisation of professionalism in the field of dental hygiene as described in this study can be a springboard for enhancing undergraduate education and clinical training.


Medical Teacher | 2018

Medical school choice and quality of undergraduate education

Takuya Saiki; Rintaro Imafuku; Yasuyuki Suzuki

Dear SirWe read with interest Heist and Torok’s article, “A qualitative exploration of the atypical path of Japanese international medical graduates (IMGs)” (Heist and Torok 2018), which provided a...


Journal of Interprofessional Care | 2018

What did first-year students experience during their interprofessional education? A qualitative analysis of e-portfolios

Rintaro Imafuku; Ryuta Kataoka; Hiroshi Ogura; Hisayoshi Suzuki; Megumi Enokida; Keitaro Osakabe

ABSTRACT Interprofessional collaboration is an essential approach to comprehensive patient care. As previous studies have argued, interprofessional education (IPE) must be integrated in a stepwise, systematic manner in undergraduate health profession education programmes. Given this perspective, first-year IPE is a critical opportunity for building the foundation of interprofessional collaborative practice. This study aims to explore the first-year students’ learning processes and the longitudinal changes in their perceptions of learning in a year-long IPE programme. Data were collected at a Japanese medical university, in which different pedagogical approaches are adopted in the IPE programme. Some of these approaches include interprofessional problem-based learning, early exposure, and interactive lecture-based teaching. The students are required to submit written reflections as a formative assessment. This study conducted an inductive thematic analysis of 104 written reflections from a series of e-portfolios of 26 first-year students. The themes related to learning outcomes from student perspectives included communication (e.g., active listening and intelligible explanation), teams and teamwork (e.g., mutual engagement and leadership), roles/responsibilities as a group member (e.g., self-directed learning and information literacy), and roles/responsibilities as a health professional (e.g., understanding of the student’s own professional and mutual respect in an interprofessional team). The study also indicated three perspectives of students’ learning process at different stages of the IPE, i.e., processes by which students became active and responsible learners, emphasised the enhancement of teamwork, and developed their own interprofessional identities. This study revealed the first-year students’ learning processes in the year-long IPE programme and clarified the role of the first-year IPE programme within the overall curriculum. The findings suggest that the students’ active participation in the IPE programme facilitated their fundamental understanding of communication/teamwork and identity formation as a health professional in interprofessional collaborative practice.


Interdisciplinary Journal of Problem-based Learning | 2014

Students’ Experiences in Interdisciplinary Problem-based Learning: A Discourse Analysis of Group Interaction

Rintaro Imafuku; Ryuta Kataoka; Mitsuori Mayahara; Hisayoshi Suzuki; Takuya Saiki


International Journal of Medical Education | 2015

How do students' perceptions of research and approaches to learning change in undergraduate research?

Rintaro Imafuku; Takuya Saiki; Chihiro Kawakami; Yasuyuki Suzuki


Medical science educator | 2018

Online and Face-to-Face: Developing an Inter-University Undergraduate Research

Rintaro Imafuku; Katsumi Nishiya; Takuya Saiki; Hiroki Okada


Medical science educator | 2018

Exploring Medical Students’ and Faculty’s Perspectives on Benefits of Undergraduate Research Experience

Rintaro Imafuku; So Yasuda; Koji Hashimoto; Daiya Matsunaga; Yusuke Ohashi; Kazuo Yamamoto; Koji Tsunekawa; Takuya Saiki


Journal of Nursing Education and Practice | 2018

Reasons and decision-making processes for applying to nursing school among nurses showing delayed professional development

Chihiro Kawakami; Rintaro Imafuku; Koji Tsunekawa; Takuya Saiki


BMC Medical Education | 2017

What do Japanese residents learn from treating dying patients? The implications for training in end-of-life care

Kazuko Arai; Takuya Saiki; Rintaro Imafuku; Chihiro Kawakami; Kazuhiko Fujisaki; Yasuyuki Suzuki

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