Innovations in medical education in Vietnam
Date
2021-03-21Author
Duong, David B.
Phan, Tom
Nguyen, Quang trung
Le, Bao Ngoc
Do, Hoa Mai
Nguyen, Hoang Minh
Tang, Sang Hung
Pham, Van Anh
Le, Bao Khac
Le, Cu Linh
Siddiqui, Zarrin
Cosimi, Lisa A.
Pollack, Todd
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Medical education reforms are a crucial component to ensuring healthcare systems can meet current and future population needs. In 2010, a Lancet commission called for ‘a new century of transformative health professional education’, with a particular focus on the needs of low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), such as Vietnam. This requires policymakers and educational leaders to find and apply novel and innovative approaches to the design and delivery of medical education. This review describes the current state of physician training in Vietnam and how innovations in medical education curriculum, pedagogy, and technology are helping to transform medical education at the undergraduate and graduate levels. It also examines enabling factors, including novel partnerships and new education policies which catalyzed and sustained these innovations. Our review focused on the experience of five public universities of medicine and pharmacy currently undergoing medical education reform, along with a newly established private university. Research in the area of medical education innovation is needed. Future work should look at the outcomes of these innovations on medical education and the quality of medical graduates. Nonetheless, this review aims to inspire future innovations in medical education in Vietnam and in other LMICs.
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- Le Cu Linh, MD, PhD [12]