Degree | Type | Year | Semester |
---|---|---|---|
2502442 Medicine | FB | 1 | 1 |
None
The main objective of the subject is to introduce the first year students to the knowledge and use of the basic tools of knowledge and medical practice, in order to facilitate subsequent learning and socialization in the professional field. It is, therefore, a propaedeutic subject that helps students acquire skills and abilities that will be useful in achieving the specific learning outcomes of the other subjects of the medical degree.
In the first thematic block the student must know the basic structure of the current medical vocabulary and the problems of oral and written communication in the field of medical sciences and must acquire the ability to understand the dynamics of information in medicine, the most important types of documents and the way of selectively retrieve certain information. This block is complemented by two practical sessions where students must complete the skills and abilities included in this section.
In the following blocks, the students will examine several basic problems of the health sciences from a historical perspective. In this sense, and in the face of the dispersion of specialized contents that students will find during their career, this part of the subject offers an integrated vision of medicine in which human beings are considered as a multidimensional entity where the interrelation of factors of all kinds (biological, psychological and social) condition and modify both the states of health and illness and their manifestations. These factors will be studied historically and from different perspectives (social class, gender, race), in order to determine their influence on the states of health and disease of the populations throughout history.
In the theoretical classes as well as in the practices and seminars, the student will have to carry out a series of activities that will familiarize him/her with the use of the various conceptual, methodological and instrumental tools necessary to develop an autonomous vision, and at the same time critical and rigorous, of the role ofmedicine in the system of health and social assistance.
Due to its characteristics, this subject is programmed in the first semester of the first year and its objectives and contents are complemented with those of the "Clinical Care Practice I" and "Integrated Learning in Medicine I" subjects, especially, Module 1 of the latter ("Introduction to Research”).
Origins, transmission and evolution of medical language. Information systems in health sciences. Historic bases of the scientific method in the field of health. The origins of the disease. Medical systems. History of medical knowledge and healthcare practices. Concepts of health and illness. The social history of diseases. The models of medical assistance. From individual hygiene to social medicine. The emergence of modern hospital and primary health care. The teaching of health sciences. The health professions.
DISTRIBUTION BLOCKS
A. LANGUAGE, DOCUMENTATION AND METHOD OF MEDICINE
B. ILLNESS, CULTURE AND POPULATION
C. THE MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE AND ITS APPLICATION TO THE WESTERN
D. THE DISEASE AND THE PROCESS OF MEDICALIZATION
E. ANALYSIS OF MEDICAL TERMS
F. ACCESS TO MEDICAL DOCUMENTS
G. MATERIAL CULTURE OF MEDICINE
H. HISTORY, GENDER AND MEDICINE
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
I. Directed activity:
THEORY
Lectures (60 min)
A. LANGUAGE, DOCUMENTATION AND METHOD OF MEDICINE.
1. Information in the medical sciences
2. The medical language and the structure of the medical terms
3. Neologisms and obstacles to communication in medicine
4. Medical documents: structure, function and location
5. The systems of retrieval of the bibliographic information
6. The medical history
7. The cycle of research in medical sciences
8. Observation and experimentation in medicine
9. Strategies for obtaining data
10. The medical act and the clinical reasoning: the diagnostic hypothesis and the prognostic judgment
B. ILLNESS, CULTURE AND POPULATION
11. The disease as a historical, biological, social and cultural phenomenon
12. The first vestiges of the disease. Paleopathology
13. The historical demography and the structure of the populations
14. Illness, population and society. The historical epidemiology
15. The society against the disease. Medical systems
16. The disease to archaic cultures
17. The disease in classical cultures
C. THE MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE AND ITS APPLICATION TO THE WESTERN
18. Diffusion and validity of Greek classical medicine
19. The Galenic traditional medicine
20. The origins of modern scientific medicine
21. The modern medicine of the 17th and 18th centuries
22. The experimental medicine
23. The historical configuration of the hospital
24. The teaching of medicine
25. The healthcare professional figure
D. THE DISEASE AND THE PROCESS OF MEDICALIZATION
26. From personal hygiene to public hygiene
27. Plague and miasmatic theory
28. Cholera and Industrial Revolution
29. Positivism and sanitarism in the prevention of the disease
30. Tuberculosis and the social question
31. Eugenics:agreements and divergences about "good birth" and "good living"
32. Sanitary internationalism and colonial difference
33. Gender relations in the health sciences
34. Collectivization of medical care
35. From charity to social security
LABORATORY PRACTICES
Practical class in specialized space - Computer room (180 min)
36. Analysis of medical terms (E)
37. Access to medical documents (F)
SPECIALIZED SEMINARS
Seminar in specialized space (60 min)
38, 39, 40. Material culture of Medicine (G)
41, 42, 43. History, gender and medicine (H)
II. Autonomous activities:
Comprehensive reading of articles and reports of interest (50 hours)
Personal study (12 hours)
Preparation and presentation of work (20 hours)
III. Supervised activities:
Presentation / Oral presentation of works (8 hours)
IV. Deliveries:
Copy of the work done at the seminars
Place: Secretary's Office of History of Medicine
Title | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|
Type: Directed | |||
LABORATORY PRACTICES | 6 | 0.24 | 1, 6, 18, 19, 25 |
SPECIALIZED SEMINARS | 11.5 | 0.46 | 1, 2, 4, 3, 5, 24, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 22, 21, 23, 25 |
THEORY | 35 | 1.4 | 2, 3, 8, 6, 9, 24, 14, 15, 16, 17, 22, 21, 23, 19 |
Type: Supervised | |||
ORAL PRESENTATION / EXPOSITION OF WRITTEN WORKS | 8 | 0.32 | 2, 3, 8, 9, 24, 14, 15, 16, 17, 22, 21, 23 |
Type: Autonomous | |||
COMPREHENSIVE READING OF ARTICLES AND REPORTS OF INTEREST | 50 | 2 | 25 |
PREPARATION OF WRITTEN WORKS | 20 | 0.8 | 13, 25 |
SELF-STUDY | 12 | 0.48 | 6, 19, 25 |
The system of evaluation of the acquisition of the competences for this matter is organized in three modules that correspond to thematic blocks and teaching typologies.
Theory: Assessments written through objective tests: Selection items: Elements of multiple choice (50%). The evaluation of the theoretical part of the subject is equivalent to 5 points (out of 10) of the overall grade of the course and will be carried out through a 35-question multiple choice exam, which will include the subject matter of the subject blocks A, B, C and D. The students must obtain at least 2.5 points to pass this section.
Practices: Assessments written through objective tests: Selection items: Items of multiple choice (20%). The evaluation of the practical part (blocks E and F) equals 2 points (out of 10) of the global mark of the subject. It will be carried out by means of a 15 multiple choice questions corresponding to practices 1 and 2. The students must obtain at least one point to pass this section.
Seminars: Evaluation through practical cases and resolution of problems and oral defence of works (30%). The evaluation of the seminars (blocks G and H) equals 3 points (out of 10) of the overall grade of the subject. It will be carried out through the participation in the seminar (Problem-Based Learning -PBL-) and the realization and presentation of works. The student must obtain at least one and a half points to pass this section.
The final score will be the sum of the points obtained. In order for the assessment to be effective, the student must pass each one of the different tests separately.
The students who have not passed the subject will be able to submit to a proof of recovery of the blocks A, B, C and D (Theory) and blocks E and F (Practices). The recovery of the evaluation of the blocks G and H (Seminars) is not contemplated given its teaching methodology in problem-based learning (PBL).
To participate in the recovery students must have previously been evaluated of thematic blocks whose weight equals to a minimum of two thirds of the total grade of thesubject.
In addition, to participate in the recovery students must have obtained at least3.5 in the total grade of the subject.
Students who do not perform both theoretical and practical evaluation tests will be considered "Not evaluated", exhausting the registration rights of the subject.
Title | Weighting | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Practices: Written evaluations through objective tests: Selection items: Elements of multiple choice | 20% | 2 | 0.08 | 1, 6, 19, 25 |
Seminars: Evaluation through practical cases and resolution of problems and oral defence of works | 30% | 3.5 | 0.14 | 1, 2, 4, 3, 5, 8, 9, 24, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 22, 21, 23, 25 |
Theory: Assessments written through objective tests: Items of selection: Multiple choice. | 50% | 2 | 0.08 | 2, 3, 8, 7, 6, 9, 24, 12, 11, 14, 15, 16, 17, 22, 21, 23, 19, 10 |
Specific bibliography
López Piñero JM. La medicina en la historia. Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros; 2002.
López Piñero JM, Terrada Ferrandis ML. Introducción a la medicina. Barcelona: Crítica; 2000.
Barona JL. Introducció a la medicina. València: Universitat de València; 1992.
Reference bibliography
Ripoll Miralda, J. Grec mèdic: guia per identificar termes. Barcelona: Publicacions de l'Abadia de Montserrat; 2018.
Bernabeu Mestre J. El llenguatge de les ciències de la salut. Introducció a la formació de termes mèdics. València: Conselleria de Sanitat i Consum de la Generalitat Valenciana / Universitat d'Alacant; 1995.
Cueva Martín A de la, Aleixandre Benavent R, Rodríguez i Gairín J M. Fonts d'informació en ciències de la salut. Valencia: Universitat de València; 2002.
Harding, Sandra G. Ciencia y feminismo. Madrid: Morata; 1996.
López Piñero JM, Terrada Ferrandis ML. Introducción a la terminología médica. 2ª ed. Barcelona: Masson; 2005.
Medicina Clínica. Manual de estilo. Publicaciones biomédicas. Barcelona: Doyma; 1993
Navarro Acebes X. Curs pràctic de terminologia mèdica. 2a ed. Bellaterra: Servei de Publicacions de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; 1998.
Internet resources
ICJME. Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals - http://www.icmje.org/recommendations
Diccionari Enciclopèdic de Medicina - http://www.grec.net/home/cel/mdicc.htm
Diccionario médico-biológico, histórico y etimológico - https://dicciomed.usal.es/