Literature DB >> 15025643

Teaching anatomy without cadavers.

John C McLachlan1, John Bligh, Paul Bradley, Judy Searle.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Anatomy learning is generally seen as essential to medicine, and exposure to cadavers is generally seen as essential to anatomy learning around the world. Few voices dissenting from these propositions can be identified. AIMS: This paper aims to consider arguments relating to the use of cadavers in anatomy teaching, and to describe the rationale behind the decision of a new UK medical school not to use cadaveric material. DISCUSSION: First, the background to use of cadavers in anatomy learning is explored, and some general educational principles are explored. Next, arguments for the use of human cadaveric material are summarised. Then, possible arguments against use of cadavers, including educational principles as well as costs, hazards and practicality, are considered. These are much less well explored in the existing literature. Next, the rationale behind the decision of a new UK medical school not to use cadaveric material is indicated, and the programme of anatomy teaching to be employed in the absence of the use of human remains is described. Curriculum design and development, and evaluation procedures, are briefly described. Issues surrounding pathology training by autopsy, and postgraduate training in surgical anatomy, are not addressed in this paper. FUTURE DIRECTIONS: Evidence relating to the effect on medical learning by students not exposed to cadavers is scant, and plainly opportunities will now arise through our programme to gather such evidence. We anticipate that this discussion paper will contribute to an ongoing debate, in which virtually all previous papers on this topic have concluded that use of cadavers is essential to medical learning.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15025643     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2923.2004.01795.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Educ        ISSN: 0308-0110            Impact factor:   6.251


  72 in total

1.  [Autopsies 2010. Is death still teaching the living?].

Authors:  C Tóth
Journal:  Pathologe       Date:  2010-07       Impact factor: 1.011

2.  "Between a Rock and a Hard Place": The discordant views among medical teachers about anatomy content in the undergraduate medical curriculum.

Authors:  Ibrahim M Inuwa; Varna Taranikanti; Maimouna Al-Rawahy; Sadhana Roychoudhry; Omar Habbal
Journal:  Sultan Qaboos Univ Med J       Date:  2012-02-07

3.  The study techniques of Asian, American, and European medical students during gross anatomy and neuroanatomy courses in Poland.

Authors:  Anna Zurada; Jerzy St Gielecki; Nilab Osman; R Shane Tubbs; Marios Loukas; Agnieszka Zurada-Zielińska; Neru Bedi; Dariusz Nowak
Journal:  Surg Radiol Anat       Date:  2010-08-24       Impact factor: 1.246

4.  Impact of cadaveric surgical anatomy training on urology residents knowledge: a preliminary study.

Authors:  Serkan Özcan; Emre Huri; İlkan Tatar; Mustafa Sargon; Tolga Karakan; Ömer Faruk Yağlı; Murat Bağcıoğlu; Stéphane Larre
Journal:  Turk J Urol       Date:  2015-06

5.  Cadavers as teachers: the dissecting room experience in Thailand.

Authors:  Andreas Winkelmann; Fritz H Güldner
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2004-12-18

6.  Attitudes and reactions of Jordanian medical students to the dissecting room.

Authors:  Ziad M Bataineh; Taghreed A Hijazi; Marwan F Abu Hijleh
Journal:  Surg Radiol Anat       Date:  2006-03-28       Impact factor: 1.246

7.  Toward an aesthetic medicine: developing a core medical humanities undergraduate curriculum.

Authors:  Alan Bleakley; Robert Marshall; Rainer Brömer
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2006

8.  Clinical neuroanatomy module 5 years' experience at the School of Medicine of Padova.

Authors:  Veronica Macchi; Andrea Porzionato; Carla Stecco; Anna Parenti; Raffaele De Caro
Journal:  Surg Radiol Anat       Date:  2007-03-28       Impact factor: 1.246

9.  How the dissection laboratory facilitates integration of learning: presence of abdominal aortic aneurysm with a large intracardiac thrombus: a rare cadaver finding.

Authors:  Motaz M Alyafi; Abdulhadi A Alamodi; Bernhard H J Juurlink; Paul Ganguly
Journal:  Int J Angiol       Date:  2012-06

Review 10.  Building an open academic environment - a new approach to empowering students in their learning of anatomy through 'Shadow Modules'.

Authors:  Jonathan L Scott; Bernard J Moxham; Stephen M Rutherford
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2013-09-30       Impact factor: 2.610

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