This module is designed for healthcare professionals (doctors, nurses, health care managers, medical students, medical and pharmaceutical researchers, radiographers, health care educators, chaplains, medical volunteers, hospice personnel and social workers), but students with interest in bioethics, medical sociology and medical anthropology are also encouraged to apply.
Students have the opportunity to explore topics like: International Medical Migration, Ethics and Pandemics, Principles of Global Justice in Healthcare, Pharmaceutical Cultures, International Professionalism, Medical Values across the World. The module will be taught by mixed teams of clinicians, ethicists, and global health experts. Students with experience in international placements are invited to share their experiences and thoughts.
In comparison to the other modules this module allows students to apply ethical theories to wider, global healthcare scenarios and to analyse in greater depth challenges of practicing medicine in a different culture. Current topics of critical debate will be presented by experts, who are working at the heart of these ethical challenges within the healthcare system.
The summative assessments for this module consist of two components 1. Presentation (30%, topic of choice); 2. Essay, (70%, Case study report, 3000 words).
Liverpool’s School of Medicine is ideally located for access to some of the UK’s leading specialist clinical units. Students will have the advantage of being taught by ethicists together with clinical experts in hospitals such as Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, The Palliative Care Institute Liverpool, Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital, and The Walton Centre, the UK’s only specialist hospital trust dedicated to neurological services.
Students also benefit from the expertise within the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences research institutes teaching and research links with the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, and surrounding medical institutions.