Literature DB >> 19174663

Medical humanities and their discontents: definitions, critiques, and implications.

Johanna Shapiro1, Jack Coulehan, Delese Wear, Martha Montello.   

Abstract

The humanities offer great potential for enhancing professional and humanistic development in medical education. Yet, although many students report benefit from exposure to the humanities in their medical education, they also offer consistent complaints and skepticism. The authors offer a pedagogical definition of the medical humanities, linking it to medicine as a practice profession. They then explore three student critiques of medical humanities curricula: (1) the content critique, examining issues of perceived relevance and intellectual bait-and-switch, (2) the teaching critique, which examines instructor trustworthiness and perceived personal intrusiveness, and (3) the structural/placement critique, or how and when medical humanities appear in the curriculum. Next, ways are suggested to tailor medical humanities to better acknowledge and reframe the needs of medical students. These include ongoing cross-disciplinary reflective practices in which intellectual tools of the humanities are incorporated into educational activities to help students examine and, at times, contest the process, values, and goals of medical practice. This systematic, pervasive reflection will organically lead to meaningful contributions from the medical humanities in three specific areas of great interest to medical educators: professionalism, "narrativity," and educational competencies. Regarding pedagogy, the implications of this approach are an integrated required curriculum and innovative concepts such as "applied humanities scholars." In turn, systematic integration of humanities perspectives and ways of thinking into clinical training will usefully expand the range of metaphors and narratives available to reflect on medical practice and offer possibilities for deepening and strengthening professional education.

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19174663     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181938bca

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  35 in total

Review 1.  Library collaboration with medical humanities in an american medical college in qatar.

Authors:  Sally Birch; Amani Magid; Alan Weber
Journal:  Oman Med J       Date:  2013-11

2.  Last Laughs: Gallows Humor and Medical Education.

Authors:  Nicole M Piemonte
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2015-12

3.  "Inform the Head, Give Dexterity to the Hand, Familiarise the Heart": Seeing and Using Digitised Eighteenth-Century Specimens in a Modern Medical Curriculum.

Authors:  Francis Osis
Journal:  Adv Exp Med Biol       Date:  2021       Impact factor: 2.622

4.  Proposing a Health Humanities Minor: Some Lessons.

Authors:  Virginia Bucurel Engholm; Damon Boria
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2017-12

5.  The Medical Humanities Effect: a Pilot Study of Pre-Health Professions Students at the University of Rochester.

Authors:  Clayton J Baker; Margie Hodges Shaw; Christopher J Mooney; Susan Dodge-Peters Daiss; Stephanie Brown Clark
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2017-12

6.  Learning to look from different perspectives - what can dental undergraduates learn from an arts and humanities-based teaching approach?

Authors:  F Smyth Zahra; K Dunton
Journal:  Br Dent J       Date:  2017-02-10       Impact factor: 1.626

7.  Finding resonance: the value of indirection in a reflective exercise.

Authors:  Catherine Belling
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2011-12

8.  The medical humanities and the perils of curricular integration.

Authors:  Neville Chiavaroli; Constance Ellwood
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2012-12

9.  Implementing a Narrative Medicine Curriculum During the Internship Year: An Internal Medicine Residency Program Experience.

Authors:  Tiffany Wesley; Diana Hamer; George Karam
Journal:  Perm J       Date:  2018

Review 10.  Integrating cognitive and affective dimensions of pain experience into health professions education.

Authors:  Beth Murinson; Lina Mezei; Elizabeth Nenortas
Journal:  Pain Res Manag       Date:  2011 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 3.037

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