Shared System-Level Drivers of Unprofessional Conduct During Clinical Rotations Among Medical and Dental Students: An Interpretive Description Study
Hassan Jan, Malik Zain Ul Abideen, Maira Sahar Malik, Laila Ajmal, Usman Ul Haq, Qurat Ul Ain Mehfooz, Jawad Tareen

TL;DR
This study explores how system-level factors in clinical education settings in Pakistan contribute to unprofessional behavior among medical and dental students.
Contribution
The study identifies shared, system-level drivers of unprofessional conduct in low-resource clinical education settings.
Findings
Unprofessional conduct is influenced by hierarchy, hidden curriculum, and systemic pressures in clinical training.
Students experience moral distress and withdrawal due to exposure to unprofessional behavior.
Institutional strategies are needed to promote respectful supervision and safe reporting mechanisms.
Abstract
Introduction Unprofessional conduct in clinical education refers to behaviours that deviate from accepted professional norms. These behaviours undermine learner well-being, patient dignity, and the development of professional identity. Findings from previous literature suggest that unprofessional conduct is common in Pakistani clinical training and may be reinforced within clinical environments, potentially through the influence of negative elements of the hidden curriculum. While individual incidents are often reported, less is known about how institutional and system-level factors interact to normalise or hinder mistreatment in low-resource clinical education settings. Therefore, this study aimed to explore final-year medical and dental students' perceptions of shared, system-level drivers of unprofessional conduct during clinical rotations, with the goal of producing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovations in Medical Education · Interprofessional Education and Collaboration · Hospital Admissions and Outcomes
