Literature DB >> 18058208

Striving to do good things: teaching humanities in Canadian medical schools.

M G Kidd1, J T H Connor.   

Abstract

We provide the results of a systematic key-informant review of medical humanities curricula at fourteen of Canada's seventeen medical schools. This survey was the first of its kind. We found a wide diversity of views among medical educators as to what constitutes the medical humanities, and a lack of consensus on how best to train medical students in the field. In fact, it is not clear that consensus has been attempted - or is even desirable - given that Canadian medical humanities programs are largely shaped by individual educators' interests, experience and passions. This anarchic approach to teaching the medical humanities contrasts sharply with teaching in the clinical sciences where national accreditation processes attempt to ensure that doctors graduating from different schools have roughly the same knowledge (or at least have passed the same exams). We argue that medical humanities are marginalized in Canadian curricula because they are considered to be at odds philosophically with the current dominant culture of evidence-based medicine (EBM). In such a culture where adhering to a consensual standard is a measure of worth, the medical humanities - which defy easy metrical appraisal - are vulnerable. We close with a plea for medical education to become more comfortable in the borderlands between EBM and humanities approaches.

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18058208     DOI: 10.1007/s10912-007-9049-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Humanit        ISSN: 1041-3545


  9 in total

1.  The writer is in.

Authors:  Monica Kidd
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2012-03-26       Impact factor: 8.262

2.  Seven Types of Ambiguity in Evaluating the Impact of Humanities Provision in Undergraduate Medicine Curricula.

Authors:  Alan Bleakley
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2015-12

3.  Site, Sector, Scope: Mapping the Epistemological Landscape of Health Humanities.

Authors:  Andrea Charise
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2017-12

4.  Longitudinal Service Learning in Medical Education: An Ethical Analysis of the Five-Year Alternative Curriculum at Stritch School of Medicine.

Authors:  Brian F Borah
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2018-12

5.  Evidence-Based Medicine: A Genealogy of the Dominant Science of Medical Education.

Authors:  Ariane Hanemaayer
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2016-12

6.  Medical Humanities Education and Its Influence on Students' Outcomes in Taiwan: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Bao Lan Hoang; Lynn Valerie Monrouxe; Kuo-Su Chen; Shu-Ching Chang; Neville Chiavaroli; Yosika Septi Mauludina; Chien-Da Huang
Journal:  Front Med (Lausanne)       Date:  2022-05-16

7.  How do students approach the study of the History of Medicine? Some considerations after the final exams at the first year and fourth year.

Authors:  Emanuele Armocida; Nicolò Nicoli Aldini; Ovidio Bussolati
Journal:  Acta Biomed       Date:  2021-05-12

8.  Arts practices in unreasonable doubt? Reflections on understandings of arts practices in healthcare contexts.

Authors:  Sheelagh Broderick
Journal:  Arts Health       Date:  2011-06-13

9.  Humanities and geriatric education: a strategy for recruitment?

Authors:  Christopher Frank; Ruth Elwood Martin
Journal:  Can Geriatr J       Date:  2015-03-31
  9 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.