13th April 2011- 4th Annual General Meeting has been held today at Chancellor Hall. It discussed about the problems faced by UBD students and to show proposals made by PMUBD.
The event started with the arrival of guest of honour, Yang Mulia Prof Madya Dr. Azman bin Ahmad, assistant of deputy chancellor UBD.
Some proposals set by PMUBD are as below:
-Subsidy for co-curiculum clubs are to be increased from 5% to 20%.
-Renovation for PMUBD shop costs about $35,000.(Renovation would start in May)
-The Core project: renovation of gaming room costs about $100,000.
4th Annual General Meeting
IM in the news
In the efforts to promote UBD, particularly the medical programme offered by IM, a series of articles have been published recently in the Borneo Bulletin. Below are the articles:
[Dated 06 February 2009]
Institute Of Medicine To Open New Building With More Programmes
By Sonia K
Bandar Seri Begawan - As Universiti Brunei Darussalam (UBD) is reviewing its undergraduate programmes, the Institute of Medicine (IM) at UBD will not only be offering just one bachelor programme but will be adding another masters programme as well as getting a new building this year.
From August this year, IM will be offering a Bachelor of Health Science where students will have a choice to major one of four — Medicine, Biomedical Science, Nursing and Midwifery.
On top of that, the masters programme that IM will be offering besides Masters in Primary Healthcare, is Masters in Public Health.
According to the Dean of the Institute of Medicine, Dr Anita Aziz, the new masters programme will be open to doctors, nurses and allied professionals or to anyone in the health industry.
She said that IM will also be offering few diploma programmes such as Diploma in Nursing, Diploma in Midwifery and Advanced Diploma in Nursing/Midwifery.
For the Advanced Diploma in Nursing and Midwifery, there will be 11 specialties to choose from such as mental health, midwifery or surgery.
"In addition, students can have a lot of options from a variety of courses which will give them more adaptability and flexibility. It has been developed to keep on par with the rapid changing world out there and we want our students to be better equipped, so that they can evolve together with the changing needs of the society," she added.
IM will also be changing its style of teaching, as it will be more student-centric.
"Students will be doing their own research so they will know how to obtain the necessary knowledge and resources. Apart from mediciné, students taking the three other majors will be spending up to a year abroad (Discovery Year), studying or probably doing some placements abroad," Dr Anita said.
The students will have the option of where to spend their third year, either at hospitals abroad or other universities or even labs, organisations and companies, before coming back to UBD to finish their degree.
Therefore, currently, IM is in talks and negotiations with other universities for the third year abroad programme.
As the institute is proactively looking for ties, it is quite attracted to those who can confer a diploma or related degrees, when the students spend their third year abroad.
As for the medical students, on the other hand, they will have to spend three years at the Institute of Medicine and graduate with an ordinary degree in health science. And then they will have to spend another three years abroad, where they will graduate with a medical degree, coming back as doctors.
IM currently has partnered with medical schools in the UK, Australia and Canada.
According to Dr Anita, IM now has 20 lecturers, ranging from senior lecturers to professors and associate professors.
"The bulk of our teaching staff is actually expatriates. They come from various parts of the world in various fields with different expertise," she added.
As for the Institute of Medicine's new building, they are hoping to move in sometime in April this year.
It has state-of-the-art teaching and research labs, seminar and tutorial rooms and two lecture theatres. Also included in the new building are areas for communication and ethical skills, as well as a reading room for students to study. -- Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin
[Dated 07 February 2009]
Future Docs Visit UBD's Institute Of Medicine
By Narissa Noor
Bandar Seri Begawan - UBD's Institute of Medicine (IM) is opening more windows of opportunity for young aspiring doctors to realise their dreams and this time the dream is much closer to home.
A group of Maktab Sains Paduka Seri Begawan Sultan and Maktab Duli Pengiran Muda Al-Mutitadee Billah students took a glimpse of their future recently as they toured the new facilities which they hoped is where they will spend their next three years.
Eagerly a waiting to fill in their applications, these students could be accepted into IM to pursue a Bachelor of Health Science with a major in either Medicine, Biomedical Science Nursing or Midwifery.
Fadhil Abdullah, an 18-year-old from Maktab Duli, hopes to become a general surgeon one day and sees UBD as the best route to get there. "UBD is where I want to go and getting in will be a golden opportunity for me," he remarked adding that the Discovery Year will be an added plus.
UBD medical students spend three years at the IM, graduating with a degree in Health Science before doing a further three years abroad to pursue their medical degree. Meanwhile, students of the other three majors will be able to benefit from the newly launched Discovery Year - one year in universities, hospitals or even organisations abroad.
Aspiring orthopaedist Syaahidah from Maktab Sains grew up thinking that being a doctor is the greatest job in the world. The feeling never went away. The 19-yearold thought she'd end up abroad but said, "I saw what UBD has to offer and was surprised. I realised that UBD is just as good as any other university I would have chosen."
Meanwhile, Hui from MD admits to being fickle. "I wanted to become everything from a doctor to a lawyer to an accountant and a businesswoman," she quipped. "I've finally decided on medicine because I love biology and at the end of the day I have to do something that I love," added the 19-year-old.
According to senior lecture Dr Zaw Wint, IM students are expected to have, by the end of their programme, patient care, examination and communication skills, extensive knowledge of the cardiovascular and neurological system and basic life support skills.
"The qualities of the students we are producing here at UBD are of a high standard with a benchmark from the St George's Medical School," he asserted.
Fifteen recent IM graduates from the first cohort have since moved on to pursue their medical degree in Australia, Canada and the UK.
Since the appointment of Dr Zulkamain Hanafi as Vice Chancellor of UBD, the university's structure and programmes, including those within IM, have seen a huge transformation, which has received both commendation and criticism.
However, in a recent interview with the Deputy Vice Chancellor of the University of Western Australia whose effort to review and consolidate UWA programmes have proved successful, Don Markwell had nothing but praise for the initiative.
"The view that educational leaders have around the world, in a world of rapid change and global forces is that we need to refresh the balance between the breadth that students have and the depth of their specialisation so that they can be equipped to live and work successfully in such an environment.
"The world changes and universities need to change what we offer our students to ensure that it remains highly relevant to the world as it is becoming," said Markwell who believes that a broader educational base and greater professional maturity is a necessary step in pursuing a professional career. -- Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin
Study: Doctors Don’t Always Respond with Empathy
If you’re facing a life-threatening cancer, you’d think your doctor might respond with a healthy dose of empathy for your diagnosis. However, new research published today suggests that most physicians rarely respond to their patients with empathy to patient concerns, even when they were directly related to their diagnosis or treatment options.
| The new research examined twenty recorded and transcribed consultations between physicians and their patients. It found that doctors often missed opportunities to recognize and ease the concerns of their patients. The research also discovered that doctors routinely provided virtually no emotional support to their patients. “When patients are struggling and bring up important issues, doctors don’t have to take a lot of time to address them, but they do need to respond. Showing that they understand and giving their patients more of what they need is not that difficult,” said Diane Morse, M.D., assistant professor of psychiatry and of medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center. |
Morse and her researchers examined 20 representative transcripts from recordings of 137 consultations between physicians at a Veterans Affairs hospital in the southern United States and patients with lung cancer or a pulmonary mass requiring surgical diagnosis.
Empathy — the identification with and understanding of another person’s situation and feelings — is considered an important element of communication between patients and physicians and is associated with improved patient satisfaction and compliance with recommended treatment.
In the transcribed consultations, the researchers identified 384 moments or “empathic opportunities” when patients stated or alluded to concerns, emotions or stressors. These included statements about the impact of cancer, diagnosis, treatment or health care system barriers to care. They found that physicians responded empathically to only 39 of those moments (10 percent of the total opportunities available).
The article reports several typical conversations where empathic opportunities were missed when a physician did not respond to a patient’s clue to important concerns or simply changed the subject. In one, a patient mentions the amount of time he can expect to live.
Patient: I don’t know what the average person does in just two year, three years, a year?
Physician: I think that . . . you certainly could live two or three years. I think it would be very unlikely . . . But I would say that an average figure would be several months to a year to a little bit more.
Another patient discusses smoking, perhaps wanting to discuss his regret for the role of smoking in his cancer.
Patient: No, sir, I’ve never had a heart attack, Supposedly, I worked very hard when I was a young man, a young boy. I was doing a man’s labor and I was always told I had a good strong heart and lungs. But the lungs couldn’t withstand all that cigarettes . . .
Physician: Yeah.
Patient: Asbestos and pollution and second-hand smoke and all these other things, I guess.
Physician: Do you have glaucoma?
Morse and her co-authors suggest that physicians who have patients with a life-threatening illness should consider providing empathy early in the encounter and throughout treatment to validate patient needs and explore ways to build understanding.
The connection can begin with a simple phrase, such as: “It sounds like you are very concerned about that.”
The research is consistent with several studies that reported primary care physicians, oncologists and surgeons infrequently make empathic responses. Morse suggests physicians, while busy with many tasks, might avoid empathic opportunities, especially those about mortality, because they are difficult to address.
“This difficulty may be related to limited cure potential that results in a sense of failure and/or identification with the patient that is difficult for the physician to acknowledge or express and may raise within the physician awareness of his or her own vulnerability to illness and mortality,” the researchers state. -- Courtesy of Psychcentral.com
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BHSc. in Biomedical Science
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