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The first medical school of Namibia: anatomy curriculum and unique facilities

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineMeeting abstract

Published

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The first medical school of Namibia: anatomy curriculum and unique facilities. / Wessels, Quenton; Vorster, Willie; Jacobson, Christian.
In: Clinical Anatomy, Vol. 25, No. 2, 03.2012, p. 281.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineMeeting abstract

Harvard

Wessels, Q, Vorster, W & Jacobson, C 2012, 'The first medical school of Namibia: anatomy curriculum and unique facilities', Clinical Anatomy, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 281. https://doi.org/10.1002/ca.22012

APA

Wessels, Q., Vorster, W., & Jacobson, C. (2012). The first medical school of Namibia: anatomy curriculum and unique facilities. Clinical Anatomy, 25(2), 281. https://doi.org/10.1002/ca.22012

Vancouver

Wessels Q, Vorster W, Jacobson C. The first medical school of Namibia: anatomy curriculum and unique facilities. Clinical Anatomy. 2012 Mar;25(2):281. Epub 2011 Dec 20. doi: 10.1002/ca.22012

Author

Wessels, Quenton ; Vorster, Willie ; Jacobson, Christian. / The first medical school of Namibia : anatomy curriculum and unique facilities. In: Clinical Anatomy. 2012 ; Vol. 25, No. 2. pp. 281.

Bibtex

@article{ca3799b5a53f440e80e08f7dd11479a9,
title = "The first medical school of Namibia: anatomy curriculum and unique facilities",
abstract = "University of Namibia{\textquoteright}s School of Medicine officially opened its doors on February 8, 2010. Construction of Phase I followed shortly thereafter. Phase I comprises of a Life Sciences I building and a Skills lab. The former contains the Department of Anatomy and Department of Physiological Chemistry. The project aims at the attainment of health and social well-being of all Namibians. This constitutes part of Namibia{\textquoteright}s Vision 2030 aimed at political and economic transformation. Anatomy at the School of Medicine is presented through a clinically orientated outcome-based curriculum. This linear study programmestretches over three semesters and includes microscopic, gross, and clinical anatomy. Design of the anatomy facilities and related equipment was directed towards ease of use. The integration of state of the art technology was pursued to facilitate teaching and promote a student-centered approach. The resulting anatomy programme achieved 16 weeks of contact per semester with 3 hr of lectures and 4 hr of practical sessions weekly. Practicals include students-centred group activities, histology microscopy, and dissections. Set outcomeswere established which revolves around clinical cases along with the integration of medical imaging. The facilities and equipment allows for the sequential processing of cadaveric material with the unidirectional flow from reception, preparation, embalming, storage, dissection, and maceration. The National School of Medicine and facilities aims to contribute towards the current health needs of Namibia. The anatomy curriculum provides a concrete foundation suitable for the Namibian student with the exposure to clinical aspects.",
author = "Quenton Wessels and Willie Vorster and Christian Jacobson",
year = "2012",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1002/ca.22012",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "281",
journal = "Clinical Anatomy",
issn = "0897-3806",
publisher = "Wiley-Liss Inc.",
number = "2",
note = "Congress of the European Association of Clinical Anatomy ; Conference date: 29-06-2011 Through 01-07-2011",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The first medical school of Namibia

T2 - Congress of the European Association of Clinical Anatomy

AU - Wessels, Quenton

AU - Vorster, Willie

AU - Jacobson, Christian

PY - 2012/3

Y1 - 2012/3

N2 - University of Namibia’s School of Medicine officially opened its doors on February 8, 2010. Construction of Phase I followed shortly thereafter. Phase I comprises of a Life Sciences I building and a Skills lab. The former contains the Department of Anatomy and Department of Physiological Chemistry. The project aims at the attainment of health and social well-being of all Namibians. This constitutes part of Namibia’s Vision 2030 aimed at political and economic transformation. Anatomy at the School of Medicine is presented through a clinically orientated outcome-based curriculum. This linear study programmestretches over three semesters and includes microscopic, gross, and clinical anatomy. Design of the anatomy facilities and related equipment was directed towards ease of use. The integration of state of the art technology was pursued to facilitate teaching and promote a student-centered approach. The resulting anatomy programme achieved 16 weeks of contact per semester with 3 hr of lectures and 4 hr of practical sessions weekly. Practicals include students-centred group activities, histology microscopy, and dissections. Set outcomeswere established which revolves around clinical cases along with the integration of medical imaging. The facilities and equipment allows for the sequential processing of cadaveric material with the unidirectional flow from reception, preparation, embalming, storage, dissection, and maceration. The National School of Medicine and facilities aims to contribute towards the current health needs of Namibia. The anatomy curriculum provides a concrete foundation suitable for the Namibian student with the exposure to clinical aspects.

AB - University of Namibia’s School of Medicine officially opened its doors on February 8, 2010. Construction of Phase I followed shortly thereafter. Phase I comprises of a Life Sciences I building and a Skills lab. The former contains the Department of Anatomy and Department of Physiological Chemistry. The project aims at the attainment of health and social well-being of all Namibians. This constitutes part of Namibia’s Vision 2030 aimed at political and economic transformation. Anatomy at the School of Medicine is presented through a clinically orientated outcome-based curriculum. This linear study programmestretches over three semesters and includes microscopic, gross, and clinical anatomy. Design of the anatomy facilities and related equipment was directed towards ease of use. The integration of state of the art technology was pursued to facilitate teaching and promote a student-centered approach. The resulting anatomy programme achieved 16 weeks of contact per semester with 3 hr of lectures and 4 hr of practical sessions weekly. Practicals include students-centred group activities, histology microscopy, and dissections. Set outcomeswere established which revolves around clinical cases along with the integration of medical imaging. The facilities and equipment allows for the sequential processing of cadaveric material with the unidirectional flow from reception, preparation, embalming, storage, dissection, and maceration. The National School of Medicine and facilities aims to contribute towards the current health needs of Namibia. The anatomy curriculum provides a concrete foundation suitable for the Namibian student with the exposure to clinical aspects.

U2 - 10.1002/ca.22012

DO - 10.1002/ca.22012

M3 - Meeting abstract

VL - 25

SP - 281

JO - Clinical Anatomy

JF - Clinical Anatomy

SN - 0897-3806

IS - 2

Y2 - 29 June 2011 through 1 July 2011

ER -