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Research Articles

Medical Education in Iran: An Exploration of Some Curriculum Issues

, Ph.D., , Ph.D. & , Ph.D.
Article: 4585 | Published online: 09 Dec 2009
 

Abstract

Background: Although Iran is a large and populous country, the state of medical education is poorly understood and under researched. However, it is apparent that, in recent years, calls for reform in medical education have not tended to lead to major changes. As a result, the curricula used are in danger of being perceived as dated and less effective than they should be.

Purpose: This exploratory study is designed to investigate the perspectives and experiences of a group of the most influential medical education course planners in Iran. Its aim is to investigate their views about the nature of the undergraduate medical curriculum in Iran and explore with them ways in which such curricula could be modernized and improved.

Methods: In-depth, semi-structured interviews were used to explore the perceptions of an elite group of medical education course planners who all work in prestigious universities in Tehran. Each of these 10 individuals was interviewed twice, over a period of several months, in order that an in-depth view of their perceptions could be unraveled.

Results: A deep concern about the lack of an innovative medical education curriculum in Iran emerged as the strongest theme from the interviews. There is widespread agreement that the current curriculum is too oriented towards the students passively learning facts. There is also a perceived lack of integration between the two-year basic science courses and clinical learning. Furthermore, participants feel that poor teaching facilities and overcrowding of students has provided an unsuitable learning environment. Both positive and negative attitudes toward educational strategies in curriculum development were demonstrated. Some of the barriers to curriculum change were also discussed.

Conclusions: There is a real need for major changes in the medical education curriculum in Iran. The results of this study suggest that a move towards a curriculum that engages students as active participants in a process of lifelong learning would be highly beneficial. As clinically qualified doctors they will face many challenges in the years ahead, and a modernized curriculum should help them to acquire the necessary knowledge and develop the clinical skills and problem solving abilities they will need.