Forensic Medicine Curriculum in Medical Schools of Malaysia- A review

Every medical graduate has to compulsorily serve the government in Malaysia, before he can be a duly registered medical practitioner with the Malaysian Medical Council, in order to practise within Malaysia. During the course of his service as a Government Medical Officer, he is required to underta...

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Main Author: Charan Kishor, Shetty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4982/1/FH02-FP-17-11117.pdf
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4982/
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spelling my-unisza-ir.49822022-01-31T06:51:55Z http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4982/ Forensic Medicine Curriculum in Medical Schools of Malaysia- A review Charan Kishor, Shetty RA1001 Forensic Medicine. Medical jurisprudence. Legal medicine Every medical graduate has to compulsorily serve the government in Malaysia, before he can be a duly registered medical practitioner with the Malaysian Medical Council, in order to practise within Malaysia. During the course of his service as a Government Medical Officer, he is required to undertake medico-legal examinations of living and medico-legal autopsy of the dead relating to common offences, etc. These medical examinations are required by law for dispensing justice, as per the Penal Code, and other laws common to Malaysia and other former British Colonial countries of south Asian region. However the undergraduate Forensic Medicine curriculum has been progressively whittled down through repeated amendments of the undergraduate syllabus on the lines followed in some of the more developed nations. The latter have adequate post-graduate qualified Forensic experts in each district to undertake these tasks, and do not require the medical graduate to undertake these onerous and difficult examinations in their districts. This reduction of the under-graduate Forensic syllabus has resulted in many of the graduates not being given exposure to the minimal content necessary to undertake these examinations. They are thus uninitiated and unaware of the various situations and their responsibilities where they may be required to undertake these examinations for corroborating a crime or proving the innocence of a suspect examined. This paper lays emphasis on the legal expectations and also about standardization of forensic medicine curriculum for undergraduate medical degrees in Malaysian medical schools. 2014-01 Article PeerReviewed text en http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4982/1/FH02-FP-17-11117.pdf Charan Kishor, Shetty (2014) Forensic Medicine Curriculum in Medical Schools of Malaysia- A review. Bangladesh Journal of Medical Education, 5 (1). pp. 2-5. ISSN 2306-0654
institution Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin
building UNISZA Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin
content_source UNISZA Institutional Repository
url_provider https://eprints.unisza.edu.my/
language English
topic RA1001 Forensic Medicine. Medical jurisprudence. Legal medicine
spellingShingle RA1001 Forensic Medicine. Medical jurisprudence. Legal medicine
Charan Kishor, Shetty
Forensic Medicine Curriculum in Medical Schools of Malaysia- A review
description Every medical graduate has to compulsorily serve the government in Malaysia, before he can be a duly registered medical practitioner with the Malaysian Medical Council, in order to practise within Malaysia. During the course of his service as a Government Medical Officer, he is required to undertake medico-legal examinations of living and medico-legal autopsy of the dead relating to common offences, etc. These medical examinations are required by law for dispensing justice, as per the Penal Code, and other laws common to Malaysia and other former British Colonial countries of south Asian region. However the undergraduate Forensic Medicine curriculum has been progressively whittled down through repeated amendments of the undergraduate syllabus on the lines followed in some of the more developed nations. The latter have adequate post-graduate qualified Forensic experts in each district to undertake these tasks, and do not require the medical graduate to undertake these onerous and difficult examinations in their districts. This reduction of the under-graduate Forensic syllabus has resulted in many of the graduates not being given exposure to the minimal content necessary to undertake these examinations. They are thus uninitiated and unaware of the various situations and their responsibilities where they may be required to undertake these examinations for corroborating a crime or proving the innocence of a suspect examined. This paper lays emphasis on the legal expectations and also about standardization of forensic medicine curriculum for undergraduate medical degrees in Malaysian medical schools.
format Article
author Charan Kishor, Shetty
author_facet Charan Kishor, Shetty
author_sort Charan Kishor, Shetty
title Forensic Medicine Curriculum in Medical Schools of Malaysia- A review
title_short Forensic Medicine Curriculum in Medical Schools of Malaysia- A review
title_full Forensic Medicine Curriculum in Medical Schools of Malaysia- A review
title_fullStr Forensic Medicine Curriculum in Medical Schools of Malaysia- A review
title_full_unstemmed Forensic Medicine Curriculum in Medical Schools of Malaysia- A review
title_sort forensic medicine curriculum in medical schools of malaysia- a review
publishDate 2014
url http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4982/1/FH02-FP-17-11117.pdf
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/4982/
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score 13.164666