Literature DB >> 20814912

The role of medical museums in contemporary medical education.

Yehia M A-H Marreez1, Luuk N A Willems, Michael R Wells.   

Abstract

From the early 19th century until the most recent two decades, open-space and satellite museums featuring anatomy and pathology collections (collectively referred to as "medical museums") had leading roles in medical education. However, many factors have caused these roles to diminish dramatically in recent years. Chief among these are the great advances in information technology and web-based learning that are currently at play in every level of medical training. Some medical schools have abandoned their museums while others have gradually given away their museums' contents to devote former museum space to new classrooms, lecture halls, and laboratories. These trends have accelerated as medical school enrollment has increased and as increasing interest in biological and biomedical research activities have caused medical schools to convert museum space into research facilities. A few medical schools, however, have considered the contents of their museums as irreplaceable resources for modern medicine and medical education and the space these occupy as great environments for independent and self-directed learning. Consequently, some medical schools have updated their medical museums and equipped them with new technologies. The Anatomical Museum of Leiden University Medical Center in The Netherlands and the Medical Museum of Kawasaki Medical School in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan, are two examples of such upgraded museums. Student surveys at Leiden University have indicated that all students (100%) found audio-guided museum tours to be useful for learning and majorities of them found guided tours to be clinically relevant (87%). However, 69% of students felt that museum visits should be optional rather than compulsory within the medical training curriculum.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20814912     DOI: 10.1002/ase.168

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anat Sci Educ        ISSN: 1935-9772            Impact factor:   5.958


  7 in total

1.  "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

2.  The Use of Augmented Reality Technology in Medical Specimen Museum Tours.

Authors:  Atsushi Sugiura; Toshihiro Kitama; Masahiro Toyoura; Xiaoyang Mao
Journal:  Anat Sci Educ       Date:  2018-11-19       Impact factor: 5.958

3.  Virtual Microscopy in Undergraduate Pathology Education: An early transformative experience in clinical reasoning.

Authors:  Ritu Lakhtakia
Journal:  Sultan Qaboos Univ Med J       Date:  2021-08-29

4.  Voices from the past: results of the ESP history of pathology working group survey on pathology museums.

Authors:  Raffaella Santi; Roberta Ballestriero; Vincenzo Canzonieri; Jacek Gulcznsky; Rosa Henriques de Gouveia; Aurelio Ariza; Lina Carvalho; Gabriella Nesi
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2022-01-26       Impact factor: 4.535

5.  Extended reality visualization of medical museum specimens: Online presentation of conjoined twins curated by Dr. Jacob Henle between 1844-1852.

Authors:  Brandi S Mikami; Thomas E Hynd; U-Young Lee; J DeMeo; Jesse D Thompson; Roman Sokiranski; Sara Doll; Scott Lozanoff
Journal:  Transl Res Anat       Date:  2022-02-16

6.  Evaluation of a teaching strategy based on integration of clinical subjects, virtual autopsy, pathology museum, and digital microscopy for medical students.

Authors:  Julio A Diaz-Perez; Sharat Raju; Jorge H Echeverri
Journal:  J Pathol Inform       Date:  2014-07-30

Review 7.  Radiological imaging of teratological fetuses: what can we learn?

Authors:  Lucas L Boer; A N Schepens-Franke; J J A van Asten; D G H Bosboom; K Kamphuis-van Ulzen; T L Kozicz; D J Ruiter; R-J Oostra; W M Klein
Journal:  Insights Imaging       Date:  2017-04-24
  7 in total

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