| Literature DB >> 24366760 |
Abstract
Medical students and junior doctors learn according to the formal curriculum, but they also learn unwritten rules, the specific logic of the medical world, through a socialization process called 'the hidden curriculum'. The result of the process seems to be an exclusive professional identity, the medical habitus. This article underlines the importance of the hidden curriculum in medicine, especially in meetings where patients are discussed. These case discussions, common daily rituals in medical practice, demonstrate the dynamic interaction of learning and practice within the medical world. The article illustrates how medical core values are transferred informally and implicitly, and the role of power relations in this process. Not only are residents being assessed and trained in case discussions, but also staff are assessing each other and learning continuously. Therefore, these meetings might significantly contribute to self-regulation in medicine. The significance of the hidden curriculum should not be underestimated. Insights into the dynamics of case discussions may help medical specialists to make the most of this moment of learning and to avoid the pitfalls, for the benefit of both residents and experienced medical specialists.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24366760 PMCID: PMC3976482 DOI: 10.1007/s40037-013-0101-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Med Educ ISSN: 2212-2761
The medical habitus
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Workshop ‘case discussions and the hidden curriculum’
| In the workshop we aim at raising the consciousness of the dynamics of case discussions. We discuss the phenomenon of the hidden curriculum, the different characteristic phases of the meeting, the role of power relations and the significance of a competent chair of the meeting. We practise with different interventions for chairs in a simulation of these meetings, as to teach medical specialists for instance: to structure the meeting; to support learning by asking questions; to make considerations aloud (in this way they make their tacit knowledge explicit); to use the different functions of questions; to manage ‘teaching by humiliation’. We stress the fact that all medical specialists need to realize that they function as role models all the time |
| A point of concern that is often mentioned is the time that is available for these meetings, especially in a time where non-paid activities such as mutual and multidisciplinary meetings are under pressure |