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The Good Doctor in Medical Education 1910--2010: A Critical Discourse Analysis

Posted on:2012-09-23Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:University of Toronto (Canada)Candidate:Whitehead, Cynthia RuthFull Text:PDF
GTID:2465390011460615Subject:Health education
Abstract/Summary:
Ideas of what constitutes a good doctor underlie decisions about medical student selection, as well as curriculum design and the structure of medical education at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels of training. Factors at play include knowledge paradigms (what does a good doctor need to know), identity paradigms (who can become a good doctor) and notions about the relationship of doctors to society (the social responsibility or social accountability of the good doctor).;As with any social phenomenon, constructs of the good doctor are historically derived and socially negotiated. Ideas about the good doctor tend to be considered as 'truths' in any era, with little attention to or understanding of the assumptions that underpin any particular formulation.;In this thesis, I explore and dissect the dominant constructs of the good doctor in North American medical education between 1910 and 2010. Drawing upon Foucauldian critical discourse analysis, I focus particular attention on discursive shifts in the conception of the good doctor over the past century.;This analysis reveals a series of discursive shifts in the framing of the good doctor in medical education between 1910&...
Keywords/Search Tags:Good doctor, Medical, Critical discourse analysis, Discursive shifts
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