Korean J Med Educ.  2023 Jun;35(2):143-152. 10.3946/kjme.2023.255.

The most influence factor of the medical competence achievement regarding patient management ability on medical school graduates

Affiliations
  • 1Departments of Medical Education, Bioethics and Humanity, Bandung Islamic University, Bandung, Indonesia
  • 2Departments of Biochemistry and Nutrition, Bandung Islamic University, Bandung, Indonesia
  • 3Departments of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Bandung Islamic University, Bandung, Indonesia

Abstract

Purpose
A doctor’s professional behavior and clinical competency reflect a range of personal and interpersonal qualities, attributes, commitments, and values. This study aimed to identify the most influential factor of medical competence regarding patient management ability.
Methods
We used an analytic observational design with a cross-sectional approach, and gathered the perceptions of medical school graduates of Bandung Islamic University via an online questionnaire scored on a Likert scale. Two hundred and six medical graduates who graduated at least 3 years prior to survey were included in the study. The factors evaluated included humanism, cognitive competence, clinical skill competence, professional behavior, patient management ability, and interpersonal skill. IBM AMOS ver. 26.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, USA) was used for structural equation modelling of the six variables latent and 35 indicator variables.
Results
We found that graduates have highly positive perceptions of the humanism (95.67%). Followed by interpersonal skills (91.26%), patient management (89.53%), professional behavior (88.47%), and cognitive competence (87.12%). They rated clinical skill competence the lowest (81.7%). Regarding factors that contribute to patient management ability, the aspects of humanism, interpersonal skill, and professional behavior were found to significantly affect patient management ability (p-value=0.035, 0.00, and 0.00, respectively) with a critical rate of 2.11, 4.31, and 4.26 consecutively.
Conclusion
Humanism and interpersonal skill are two important factors that medical graduates assessed very positively. According to surveyed medical graduates, their expectations of the institution were met regarding humanism. However, there is a need to strengthen medical students’ clinical skills and improve their cognitive abilities through educational programs.

Keyword

Social skills; Medical graduate; Patient care management; Perspective; Professional behavior
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