ADVANCING INTERNAL MEDICINE EDUCATION THROUGH COMPETENCY-BASED AND INTERDISCIPLINARY INTEGRATION IN MEDICAL UNIVERSITIES
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55640/Keywords:
Competency-based learning, Internal Medicine education, interdisciplinary integration, medical pedagogy, simulation training, clinical reasoning, patient-centered education, interprofessional learning.Abstract
Modern medical education requires innovative, flexible, and evidence-based pedagogical approaches to prepare future physicians for increasingly complex healthcare environments. Traditional subject-centered instruction often fails to provide sufficient opportunities for students to connect theoretical knowledge with clinical practice. This article explores the enhancement of Internal Medicine education through a competency-based and interdisciplinary integrative approach that unifies clinical reasoning, practical skills, professional identity formation, and scientific thinking. Rather than focusing solely on merging basic and clinical sciences, this model emphasizes competencies such as communication, teamwork, ethical decision-making, problem-solving, and clinical judgment within real and simulated patient contexts.
The study analyzes contemporary trends in medical pedagogy, identifies structural gaps in Internal Medicine teaching, and proposes a practical framework for redesigning the curriculum based on integrated competencies. The approach includes interdisciplinary teaching sessions with pathology, radiology, pharmacology, family medicine, and public health; patient-centered case conferences; interprofessional collaboration; scenario-based simulation training; and digital clinical learning platforms. The research evaluates the outcomes of applying this framework in selected medical institutions using mixed-methods assessment tools.
Findings demonstrate that competency-based integrative teaching improves students’ clinical reasoning accuracy, enhances retention of key medical concepts, and increases engagement during learning activities. Students trained under this model showed stronger communication skills, improved diagnostic interpretation, and greater confidence during clinical practice. Faculty members also reported improved teaching efficiency and better alignment of learning outcomes with national and global medical education standards.
The article concludes that competency-based interdisciplinary integration forms a robust foundation for modernizing Internal Medicine education. It not only improves academic quality but also prepares graduates to function effectively in real clinical environments, collaborate across specialties, and deliver patient-centered, evidence-based care. Policy recommendations are provided to support institutional adoption of this innovative approach.
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