Literature DB >> 19330692

Creative expressive encounters in health ethics education: teaching ethics as relational engagement.

Eleanor Milligan1, Emma Woodley.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The growing expectation that health practitioners should be ethically attuned and responsive to the broader humanistic and moral dimensions of their practice has seen a rise in medical ethics courses in universities. Many of these courses incorporate creative expressive encounters--such as the exploration and interpretation of poetry, art, music, and literature--as a powerful vehicle for increasing understanding of the illness experience and to support a relational approach to ethics in health care practices. DESCRIPTION: First-year paramedic students were invited to produce their own creative composition in response to a short vignette describing the plight of a fictional "patient-other." Our aim was twofold: first, to engage their "sympathetic imaginations" to capture a sense of illness as being not only a fracturing of bodily wellness but also, for many, a fracturing of holistic well-being, and second, to encourage an ethics of relational engagement-rather than an ethics based on the detached, intellectual mastery of moral principles and theories-within their paramedical practice. EVALUATION: After some initial apprehension, students embraced this task, producing works of great insight and sensitivity to the embedded and embodied nature of "being." Their work demonstrated deep ethical understanding of the multiple subjective and intersubjective layers of the illness experience, displaying a heightened understanding of ethics in practice as a relational engagement.
CONCLUSION: Educationally, we found this to be an extremely powerful and successful pedagogical tool, with our students noting emotional and intellectual transformations that challenged and sensitised them to the deeper human dimensions of their practice.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19330692     DOI: 10.1080/10401330902791248

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Teach Learn Med        ISSN: 1040-1334            Impact factor:   2.414


  3 in total

1.  The sensible health care professional: a care ethical perspective on the role of caregivers in emotionally turbulent practices.

Authors:  Vivianne Baur; Inge van Nistelrooij; Linus Vanlaere
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2017-12

2.  Why narrative matters (but not exclusively) in bioethics education: Comment on "Shanachie and Norm" by Malcolm Parker.

Authors:  Eleanor Milligan
Journal:  J Bioeth Inq       Date:  2012-10-12       Impact factor: 1.352

Review 3.  Creative Expression of Science through Poetry and Other Media can Enrich Medical and Science Education.

Authors:  Sherry-Ann Brown
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2015-01-22       Impact factor: 4.003

  3 in total

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