Journal of British Islamic Medical Association, cilt.4, sa.2, ss.23-26, 2020 (Hakemli Dergi)
During their educational life, medical students encounter several challenges, the origins and causes of which vary.
This paper explores and attempts to scrutinize two of these challenges, before eventually introducing the concept
of responsibility. First, this paper describes the general characteristics of medical schools, medical students, and
medical education. Second, two different ethical challenges that medical students confront are then delineated:
the anxiety of continuously questioning ‘while being trained, do I cause patients to receive suboptimal health
care?’ and occasionally feeling obligated, consequently, to breach the ethical boundaries to practice procedures on
patients. Finally, the faculty of responsibility and its components are introduced and discussed as a model that can
overcome these ethical challenges.