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Thord Theodorsson India and the African continent. On the other hand the price of rapidly achieving a highly affluent standard of living has come to reflect itself in entities such as ‘af- fluent malnutridon’ which along with a sedentary way of living manifests itself in very high frequencies of noninsulin dependent diabetes ( -10% prev. of NIDDM) and an increasing toll of ischaemic heart disease 6. Old scourges such as malaria, tuberculosis and tra- choma are rapidly on the vane due to successful public health measures. What still remains are threats of genetic disorders such as sickle cell disease and thalassa- emia. FAMCO - THE DEPARTMENT 0F FAMILY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH As stated above Sultan Qaboos University (SQU) started from scratch in 1986. Luckily those who were in charge of its planning had taken account of the international debate regarding the need for providing efficient primary health care on a modern basis. To that end FAMCO was allocated a much greater share of the clinical curriculum than traditionally has been the case in medical schools worldwide. After achieving a BSc degree (a four year course) the student enters a three year clinical clerkship in which FAMCO is seen as one of the five major specialties, in parity with internal medicine, child health, surgery and obstetrics and gynaecology. Furthermore FAMCO in conjunction with the department of epidemiology and statistics runs preclinical courses and field studies. These address the issues of epidemiology and statistics, nutrition and health education. A group of students ‘adopt’ a local community (villa- ge), identify a health problem to address and then plan and pursue a field study. This exposure to some aspects of community medicine as well as to a certain degree clinical medicine enables the student to appreciate and become aware of the potentials of primary health care. The experience sofar has been a very positive feedback from the students, highlighting the need for comm- unity orientation to clinical practice.lt has demon- strated the feasibility of integrating health care into the undergraduate curriculum at an early stage 7. FAMCO - THE CLINICAL CURRICULUM During their clinical clerksip the students join FAMCO in their 5th year for a 8 week period (junior clerkship) and again in their 7th year (final year) for a 7 week period (senior clerkship). In the junior clerks- hip the main emphasis is on the principles and practice of family medicine, whereas in the senior clerkship the focus extends more to the overall principles of primary health care. N ow, 85-90 students rotate through FAMCO per year, in each clerkship. Along with their clinical clerkships the students receive an integrated lecture and practical series cover- ing core knowledge in the field of clinical medicine. These are partly in a lecture format and partly in more novel problem-oriented group tutorials. Other features of the clinical years include an elective in which the student travels abroad and spends 10 weeks at some internationally recognised medical school. The ‘chart- er class’ graduated 1993 and the fourth class is gradu- ating 1996, numbering 60 graduates. The previous two classes were somewhat smaller numbering around 45 each. FAMCO runs a clinic catering for the health care needs of the University’s employees and their families. The clinic is fairly well equipped according to western standards but the patient population is very heterogen- ous reflecting the mixed ethnic background of the employees. Affiliated with the FAMCO clinic are a number of outlying health centres in the close vicinity of the University whereto the students are also all- ocated during their FAMCO clerkship. In those health centres they are under the supervision of expatriate doctors mainly from Egypt, India or Pakistan. These doctors have been to some extent retrained in the principles of family medicine by the FAMCO faculty. In light of the highly doctor-centred health care ser- vices provided in the many (around 45 in number) newly established hospitals around the country as well as the common practice among the Omani nationals of going ‘doctor shopping’, FAMCO places great emp- hasis on patient-centredness in its teaching. Each stu- dent is exposed to a stay in the FAMCO health centre, where he is supervised by a senior faculty doctor who directs him in a patient-centred approach to all medical problems. During the junior clerkship each student has to identify two patient cases to present, one orally and the LÆKNANEMINIM 14 1. tbl. 1997, 50. árg.
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