Abstract:
In line with the Healthy China strategy, new requirements for medical education have been raised. Medical education against the background of a new model of medicine demands an effective response to its inherent complex elements concerning the rule of law. During the course of the implementation of the new medicine strategy, in face of the widening scope of medical risks, the growing awareness of patient rights, and the conventional logic of medical education, elements concerning the rule of law should be incorporated in medical education in the early stage so as to help medical practitioners develop the appropriate legal literacy and rely on ideas of rules, equality and ethical bottomlines to analyze and solve problems. Thus, medical practitioners would be better equiped to effectively respond to the legal problems they encounter in their medical practice. Legal education is the route of choice in response to the transformation in the mode of medical education and the attempt to solve complicated problems through medicine and the rule of law. Through legal education, the risks of technology embeddedness could be avoided, the relationship between patients and medical practitioners could be regulated in a standardized way, and the medical humanistic environment could be reshaped, thereby improving the quality and level of new medical education.