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  • Book
    Kadambari D, Kumar S, Zayapragassarazan Z, Parija SC.
    Summary: The past few decades have seen the increasing use of evidence in all aspects of healthcare. The concept of evidence-informed healthcare began in the 1990s as evidence-informed practice, and has since become widely accepted. It is also accepted that the training of medical graduates must be informed by evidence obtained from educational research. This book utilizes an evidence-informed approach to improve discipline-based undergraduate medical curricula. Discipline-based undergraduate medical curricula represent a widely adopted choice for undergraduate medical education around the world. However, there have been criticisms leveled against the discipline-based approach. One of the shortcomings cited is that students are insufficiently equipped to meet the challenges of today's healthcare. As a result, various strategies have been proposed. One option, currently in vogue, is the outcome-based approach, wherein the exit behaviors of medical graduates are explicitly examined and used to guide the educational process. The shortcomings present in discipline-based undergraduate medical curricula can be overcome by the strengths of these strategies. This book recommends improving discipline-based undergraduate medical curricula by combining several strategies, including the adoption of an outcome-based approach and the use of evidence-informed implementable solutions. The book is relevant for all faculty, administrators and policymakers involved in undergraduate medical education, and can also be used as a resource for faculty development.
    Digital Access Springer 2018
  • Article
    von Kaulla KN.
    Klin Wochenschr. 1978 Feb 01;56(3):145-7.
    With human urine a very active procoagulant is excreted which converts prothrombin into thrombin in the presence of factor V, phospholipids and calcium chloride. In kidney diseases, its excretion is considerably reduced or totally absent. A negative correlation exists between these diseases and protein excretion. Kidney transplantation results in a normalization, however showing a trend which is not always parallel with the normalization of the blood creatinine levels. During the post-transplantation period, an occasional temporary, but very clear reduction with abnormal values of the kidney function tests can be observed. It is presumed that the procoagulant excretion could represent a hitherto unexplored function of the tubuli.
    Digital Access Access Options