Competence in medical practice as perceived by Malaysian medical interns: a measurement invariance analysis

This study investigates the perception of Malaysian housemen on what the indicators of competence are in the medical practice. This derives from the need for the interns to have the requisite skill needed to make them competent in the post-medical school medical practice. A survey questionnaire was...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Adewale, Abideen Adeyemi, Abd. Manaf, Noor Hazilah, Omar, Azura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Foundation for Research and Development 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/27380/1/Competence_in_Medical_Practice_as_Perceived_by_Malaysian_Medical_Interns.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/27380/
http://www.ifrnd.org/test/ResearchPapers.aspx?VolumeID=34
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Summary:This study investigates the perception of Malaysian housemen on what the indicators of competence are in the medical practice. This derives from the need for the interns to have the requisite skill needed to make them competent in the post-medical school medical practice. A survey questionnaire was administered on all 2,046 housemen in all medical schools across Malaysia as at April 30, 2008 when data was collected. Data so obtained were subjected to statistical analysis based on N=1213 using both the structural equation modeling via SPSS AMOS 18 software. Nine skills were identified in all. These are interpersonal, IT, patient management, basic, holistic, science, ethics, coping, and clinical skills. While all the skills were found to be statistically significant, no factorial invariance was observed when the data is split into demographic divides.