Igaku Kyoiku / Medical Education (Japan)
Online ISSN : 2185-0453
Print ISSN : 0386-9644
ISSN-L : 0386-9644
Attitudes and Opinions of Medical Students in Clinical Years Towards Ethical Issues in Japan
Atsushi ASAIMayuko SAITOTatsuya SAKAITakuro SHINBOTsuguya Fukui
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1998 Volume 29 Issue 4 Pages 221-225

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Abstract

We reviewed essays on clinical ethics written by 94 5th and 6th-year medical students on rotation at the Department of General Internal Medicine of Kyoto University Hospital. Issues regarding brain death, medical decisions concerning the end of life, and informed consent and truth telling were each identified as ethically important by one-third of the students. Approximately 90% of the students expressed a desire to learn more about ethical issues, including actual ethical decisions made by physicians in Japan, cross-cultural differences, medical decisions concerning the end of life, and informed consent. Most students were extremely sensitive to issues of informed consent and truth telling relevant to the patients they cared for.

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© Japan Society for Medical Education
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