Literature DB >> 23278827

Discourse(s) of emotion within medical education: the ever-present absence.

Nancy McNaughton1.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: Emotion in medical education rests between the idealised and the invisible, sitting uneasily at the intersection between objective fact and subjective values. Examining the different ways in which emotion is theorised within medical education is important for a number of reasons. Most significant is the possibility that ideas about emotion can inform a broader understanding of issues related to competency and professionalism.
OBJECTIVES: The current paper provides an overview of three prevailing discourses of emotion in medical education and the ways in which they activate particular professional expectations about emotion in practice.
METHODS: A Foucauldian critical discourse analysis of the medical education literature was carried out. Keywords, phrases and metaphors related to emotion were examined for their effects in shaping medical socialisation processes. DISCUSSION: Despite the increasing recognition over the last two decades of emotion as 'socially constructed', the view of emotion as individualised is deeply embedded in our language and conceptual frameworks. The discourses that inform our emotion talk and practice as teachers and health care professionals are important to consider for the effects they have on competence and professional identity, as well as on practitioner and patient well-being. Expanded knowledge of how emotion is 'put to work' within medical education can make visible the invisible and unexamined emotion schemas that serve to reproduce problematic professional behaviours. For this discussion, three main discourses of emotion will be identified: a physiological discourse in which emotion is described as located inside the individual as bodily states which are universally experienced; emotion as a form of competence related to skills and abilities, and a socio-cultural discourse which calls on conceptions from the humanities and social sciences and directs our attention to emotion's function in social exchanges and its role as a social, political and cultural mediator. © Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2013.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23278827     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2012.04329.x

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


  13 in total

Review 1.  Emotion as reflexive practice: A new discourse for feedback practice and research.

Authors:  Rola Ajjawi; Rebecca E Olson; Nancy McNaughton
Journal:  Med Educ       Date:  2021-11-25       Impact factor: 7.647

2.  "I'd been like freaking out the whole night": exploring emotion regulation based on junior doctors' narratives.

Authors:  Robert M Lundin; Kiran Bashir; Alison Bullock; Camille E Kostov; Karen L Mattick; Charlotte E Rees; Lynn V Monrouxe
Journal:  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract       Date:  2017-03-17       Impact factor: 3.853

3.  'You put up a certain attitude': a 6-year qualitative study of emotional socialisation.

Authors:  Melissa Bolier; Karolina Doulougeri; Joy de Vries; Esther Helmich
Journal:  Med Educ       Date:  2018-07-30       Impact factor: 6.251

4.  Knowledge, skills and beetles: respecting the privacy of private experiences in medical education.

Authors:  Mario Veen; John Skelton; Anne de la Croix
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2020-04

5.  Performance-based assessment in the 21st century: when the examiner is a machine.

Authors:  Brian D Hodges
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2021-01-11

6.  Challenging the clinically-situated emotion-deficient version of empathy within medicine and medical education research.

Authors:  Barret Michalec; Frederic W Hafferty
Journal:  Soc Theory Health       Date:  2021-11-22

7.  Medical students' reactions to an experience-based learning model of clinical education.

Authors:  Alexandra Hay; Sarah Smithson; Karen Mann; Tim Dornan
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2013-05-03

8.  Medical students find assessments stressful. Of course….but what do we do about it?

Authors:  Vicki R LeBlanc
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2014-12

9.  Does emotional intelligence at medical school admission predict future academic performance?

Authors:  Susan Humphrey-Murto; John J Leddy; Timothy J Wood; Derek Puddester; Geneviève Moineau
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 6.893

10.  Ethical reasoning through simulation: a phenomenological analysis of student experience.

Authors:  Gareth Lewis; Melissa McCullough; Alexander P Maxwell; Gerard J Gormley
Journal:  Adv Simul (Lond)       Date:  2016-08-08
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