Leadership in Undergraduate Medical Education: A Study of Pakistani Medical Students’ Perceptions, Attitudes, and Interest

Leadership in Undergraduate Medical Education: A Study of Pakistani Medical Students’ Perceptions, Attitudes, and Interest

Authors

  • Nazish Imran
  • Bakhtawar Khalid
  • Zubia Afzal
  • Saleha Azeem
  • Osheen Fatima
  • Imran Ijaz Haider
  • Muhammad Waqar Azeem
  • Afzal Javed

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21649/akemu.v29i2.5435

Keywords:

medical education, medical leadership, medical student, training, barriers

Abstract

Background: Despite calls for the much-needed involvement of physicians in leadership, very few medical colleges in Pakistan provide explicit training on the knowledge, skills, and attitudes necessary to be an effective physician leader. Objective: To explored Pakistani medical students’ perceptions, attitudes, and interests regarding Leadership training in medical education. Methods: Participants were asked about their perceptions and attitudes towards medical leadership on a 5-point Likert scale. Students also self-rated their leadership competencies noted as per Medical Leadership Competency Framework. Survey also assessed the perceived need and topics for a leadership curriculum for physician leaders, the teaching format, and barriers to leadership training in medical schools. Data were analyzed using SPSS 26. Results: 60.6% of the total 1204 respondents rated their leadership training in medical college as “very poor” or “poor” and 80.3% of them endorsed their interest and need for it. 77.4% of the participants agreed that clinicians should influence leadership decisions in a clinical setting. Only 25% of respondents were aware of the demands of a leadership rank in medicine. Leadership competencies endorsed for training included problem-solving, leading a team, confronting problematic employees, and communication skills with a multimodal teaching approach, including teaching methods like small group discussions. The main barriers to leadership training were identified as time constraints (66.1%), lack of available curriculum (69.0%), and disinterest by faculty (67.0%). Conclusion: Our study suggests that medical students in Pakistan appreciate the importance of leadership training in undergraduate education. There is a need for dedicated leadership teaching and study data to specify the possible content and delivery methods to serve as goals for an undergraduate leadership curriculum in Pakistan.

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Published

07/26/2023 — Updated on 09/27/2023

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How to Cite

Imran, N. ., Khalid, B. ., Afzal, Z. ., Azeem, S. ., Fatima, O. ., Haider, I. I. ., … Javed, A. . (2023). Leadership in Undergraduate Medical Education: A Study of Pakistani Medical Students’ Perceptions, Attitudes, and Interest. Annals of King Edward Medical University, 29(2), 105–110. https://doi.org/10.21649/akemu.v29i2.5435 (Original work published July 26, 2023)

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Research Articles

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