Curriculum
No. of Units : 1 | Semester 1 & 2 |
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Course Description: This course provides an overview of the major areas of bioethics, including the historical foundation of bioethics, the four principles, health beliefs and bias in medicine, and ethical dilemmas related to distribution justice, confidentiality, and the right to know. Case discussions will be extensively used in the course, allowing students to understand and explore the cause of ethical dilemmas in clinical scenarios and the underneath social dynamics, and develop their analytical and problem-solving skills for these dilemmas.
Course assessment includes: (a)lecture participation, (b)tutorial discussion, (c)module exercise, and (d)term-end essay. Students must pass all individual components in order to pass the course. Failure to meet one of the assessment components will result in a “Fail” for the whole course. | |
Learning Outcomes: By the end of this course, students will be able to:
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No. of Units : 1 | Semester 1 & 2 |
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Course Description: This course builds on the foundational subject areas introduced in Year 1, and discussed contemporary issues in medicine and biomedical science. It is designed to help students develop systematic strategies and analytic frameworks for identifying and examining bioethical issues and for resolving bioethical dilemmas and problems. The teaching methods for this course are lecture and tutorial format. That is, students are expected to prepare thoroughly for class by reading the assigned material so that rigorous and insightful discussion can occur during class. All tutorial attendance are mandatory. Remedial work will be assigned to unexcused absentee. Students are also required to attend four out of seven lectures. The score will be given on a pro-rata basis. | |
Learning Outcomes: Upon completion of the course, students should be able to:
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No. of Units : 1 | Semester 1 & 2 |
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Course Description: The course builds on the foundational knowledge by covering advanced topics and contemporary issues, including moral theories, brain death, end-of-life issues, physician-assisted suicide, ethics of cosmetics surgeries, and conscientious objection. This course includes a series of lectures given by clinicians, nurses, public health specialists, and bioethicists. Students will be introduced to the substantial debates in the field and try their hand at taking part in the discussion. Students will benefit from this course such that they will be more skilled in making sound arguments. Group Presentation assessments require you to research a particular topic in a small group and then prepare and deliver an oral presentation on the topic. In the presentation, students are expected to demonstrate an adequate understanding of the topic and highlight details that are ethically and morally challenging. They should also give constructive feedback to peers during the Q&A session. | |
Learning Outcomes: By the end of the course, students should be able to:
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No. of Units : 1 | Semester 1 & 2 |
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Course Description: The course builds on the foundation of Years 1-3 studies in bioethics to consider physician obligation expressed in law, regulations, professional codes and widely held norms of medical ethics. Areas considered include the doctor-patient relationship, patient capacity, consent, confidentiality, medical error and negligence, forensic pathology and related medical-legal issues, blood transfusion, end of life care and issues on the beginning of life. Attention is also devoted to presenting a general framework of the legal system, in understanding the difference between civil law and criminal law, branches of the law, the hierarchy of laws, the court system and the law making process. Students will study and consider the distinctions and possible conflicts among law and regulation, professional standards, and generally recognized normative ethical obligations. | |
Learning Outcomes:
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No. of Units : 1 | Semester 1 & 2 |
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Course Description: This course introduces ethical dilemma arising from some special circumstances in the clinical practice of each discipline. In the Family Medicine module, students will learn about issues in common clinical encounter, including taking a sexual history, truth-telling, breaking the bad news, and dealing with clinical errors. Through small group teachings, students able to observe and discuss challenges with experienced local practitioners. In the Obstetrics and Gynaecology module, students will learn about ethical issues through the interactive student forum and seminar, such as termination of pregnancy, reproductive autonomy in the face to emerging technologies, as well as obstetricians’ role in the decision-making between pregnant women and the potential human — fetus. In the Paediatrics module, students will learn about bioethical considerations that paediatricians face while treating children for health conditions. For children, unlike for adult patients, healthcare decisions are often made by someone other than the person to be treated, i.e. by the parents/primary carers. Issues of patient confidentiality, consent for treatment, and child protection require the treating doctor to be aware of the specific needs and desires of the child, and to be able to respect and adequately address situations when the child’s and parents’ views and needs diverge. In the Psychiatry module, students will learn about common and unique bioethical considerations that psychiatry faces while treating patients with mental health conditions, such as patient confidentiality, consent for treatment in psychiatric illness, and capacity determination. In addition, students are required to attend the annual Lanson Lecture hosted by the CUHK Centre for Bioethics. | |
Learning Outcomes:
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No. of Units : 1 | Semester 1 & 2 |
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Course Description: The year six medical school curriculum emphasizes clinical teaching through hospital rotations in medicine, surgery and other specialized disciplines including anaesthesia and intensive care, clinical oncology, and orthopaedics and traumatology. Besides the relevant medical knowledge necessary for day-to-day care, students must also learn to navigate the complex and multifaceted terrain of healthcare relationships between all stakeholders and the ethical challenges that arise therein. Parallel to clinical teaching, the year six bioethics course will enable and allow students to apply the theoretical models of clinical ethics in healthcare delivery. The curricular design leverages clinical experiences towards ethical decision making and resolution of dilemmas. In so doing, students will develop tangible critical thinking skills in the prevention and resolution of doctor-patient conflicts, a critical step in the transition to medical professional. Emphasis is placed on navigating difficult interactions at the bedside arising from ethically complex circumstances in the practice of each discipline. Students are expected to identify ethical issues in the patient experience inclusive of the descriptive steps required to forego or resolve ethical issues. |
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Learning Outcomes:
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No. of Units : 2 | Semester 2 |
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Course Description: This course aims to introduce the basic concepts of bioethics and explore the ethical issues that arise from biomedical sciences and clinical research, as well as during clinical diagnosis and therapeutic treatment. The examined topics cover diversified aspects from historical to recent concerns, including research conducts, embryonic stem cells, designer baby, and genetic screening, etc. Through interactive case discussion activities, students are taught to think and analyze the ethical dilemmas based on some guiding principles and theories, to respect the perspectives of different stakeholders, and to make justified actions. These practical skills could help students develop the competence to respond to various ethical challenges in their future career. | |
Learning Outcomes: By the end of this course, students will be able to:
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No. of Units : 1 | Semester 2 |
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Course Description: This course will introduce students to the basic concepts of ethics and law and explore their relevance to professional and clinical public health practices. It will introduce students to the role of ethics and law in promoting and protecting public health. Case studies will be used to highlight contemporary ethical and legal issues in public health in Hong Kong. | |
Learning Outcomes:
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No. of Units : 2 | Semester 1 |
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Course Description: This course will introduce undergraduate students to healthcare issues and challenges facing our society in the 21st century. The study of public health and healthcare ethics related themes will include history of modern medicine and public health, current global health issues, professionalism and various approaches to ethical reasoning that enable students to address the moral concerns related to public health and healthcare challenges. The various academic disciplines within the domains of public health will be introduced through case presentations of various global public health issues including infectious diseases, air pollution, healthcare safety, and non-communicable diseases followed by experience sharing by eminent health professionals. | |
Learning Outcomes:
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No. of Units : 2 | Semester 1 |
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Course Description: This course will introduce undergraduate students to healthcare issues and challenges facing our society in the 21st century. The study of public health will include history of modern medicine and public health to current global health issues including infectious disease & pandemics, air pollution, non-communicable diseases and policy making. Introduction to data, research and evidence base will encompass data interpretations and study designs, bias and misinformation to equip students with the basics in finding and critically analysing information and in presenting information in poster and oral presentation | |
Learning Outcomes: By the end of this course, students should be able to:
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No. of Units : 2 | Semester 2 |
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Course Description: Different values and beliefs, opposing clinical objectives, and resource limitations are persistent issues in medical and healthcare settings, from which ethical dilemmas could arise among healthcare practitioners, patients, and their family members, who are unavoidably engaged in the decision-making process in difficult health, life, and death scenarios. These scenarios may include but are not limited to organ donation, resuscitation of a terminally ill loved one, withdrawing or withholding life-sustaining and standard curative treatments for an end-of-life patient, active euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide, as well as healthcare rationing. While a well-established legal and health system can provide guidelines for walking through these processes, the values and beliefs of the patients, healthcare workers, and other decision-makers (including family members and guardians) would shape the way decisions are made. Therefore, understanding the factors that may shape or influence one’s values and moral beliefs is crucial for any meaningful discussions to resolve these dilemmas. This course will use a systematic approach to guide students in understanding the moral theories and principles pertinent to the works of bioethics, identifying the morally salient features and arguments of selected clinical, healthcare, and health-related scenarios, discussing and analyzing the main bioethical issues of those scenarios, as well as describing ways to resolve the relevant moral dilemma. Students will be introduced to different simulation exercises and scenarios to realize and reflect on the factors that shape their own decisions as well as moral values and beliefs. The course will utilize lectures, tutorials, case studies, and sharing of hands-on experience to guide students in adopting an all-rounded, holistic, and perspective-based approach to discuss and resolve the bioethical dilemmas related to health, life, and death matters | |
Learning Outcomes: After completion of this course, students will be able to:
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