Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3329/jss.v23i2.46113
Title: The Student Room Survey: Changes in the Post Graduate Study for Cardiothoracic Surgery
Authors: Sazzad, Md Faizus 
Mohammed Moniruzzaman 
Choudhury, Dewan Iftakher Raza
Mohiuddin, Arif Ahmed
Rahman, Raafi
Khan, Omar Sadeque
Salekin, Sirajus
Mohammad Musa, Samsul Arif
Russel, Saklayen
Issue Date: Jul-2019
Publisher: Bangladesh Journals Online (JOL)
Citation: Sazzad, Md Faizus, Mohammed Moniruzzaman, Choudhury, Dewan Iftakher Raza, Mohiuddin, Arif Ahmed, Rahman, Raafi, Khan, Omar Sadeque, Salekin, Sirajus, Mohammad Musa, Samsul Arif, Russel, Saklayen (2019-07). The Student Room Survey: Changes in the Post Graduate Study for Cardiothoracic Surgery. Journal of Surgical Sciences 23 (2) : 71-74. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3329/jss.v23i2.46113
Abstract: Background: The number of postgraduate students in Cardiac surgical discipline is increasing day by day with incremental proportion are measurably suffering from the unnecessary lingering of the present course curriculum. The primary objective of this study was to find out the last 5 years’ of results of Masters in Surgery course under the University of Dhaka from a student room survey. A secondary objective was to find out positive changes that could show us the way of a step toward up-gradation. Methods: It is a retrospective analysis of all examination results of Cardio-vascular & Thoracic Surgery published since January 2008 to January 2013 from the University of Dhaka with in depth interview of 11 participants. Results: 85.24% students failed to pass part-I of Masters in Surgery for Cardio-vascular & Thoracic Surgery course while, 82.18% in part-II and 71.28% failed to pass the final part. Average 2.51 attempts needed to complete each part of the designed course resulted into lingering of course duration for 42.18 months/student. In the thoracic surgery discipline the number of students alarmingly reduced up to 0% in the recent academic sessions. Conclusions: Masters in Surgery is resulting in unnecessary prolongation of the course. We should step forward to meet the next generation challenge. Journal of Surgical Sciences (2019) Vol. 23(2): 71-74
Source Title: Journal of Surgical Sciences
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/192036
ISSN: 17282152
24088668
DOI: 10.3329/jss.v23i2.46113
Appears in Collections:Staff Publications
Elements

Show full item record
Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormatAccess SettingsVersion 
11. Student room survey.pdfPublished version854.6 kBAdobe PDF

OPEN

PublishedView/Download

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.