Literature DB >> 25945967

Bringing home the health humanities: narrative humility, structural competency, and engaged pedagogy.

Rebecca K Tsevat1, Anoushka A Sinha, Kevin J Gutierrez, Sayantani DasGupta.   

Abstract

As health humanities programs grow and thrive across the country, encouraging medical students to read, write, and become more reflective about their professional roles, educators must bring a sense of self-reflexivity to the discipline itself. In the health humanities, novels, patient histories, and pieces of reflective writing are often treated as architectural spaces or "homes" that one can enter and examine. Yet, narrative-based learning in health care settings does not always allow its participants to feel "at home"; when not taught with a critical attention to power and pedagogy, the health humanities can be unsettling and even dangerous. Educators can mitigate these risks by considering not only what they teach but also how they teach it.In this essay, the authors present three pedagogical pillars that educators can use to invite learners to engage more fully, develop critical awareness of medical narratives, and feel "at home" in the health humanities. These pedagogical pillars are narrative humility (an awareness of one's prejudices, expectations, and frames of listening), structural competency (attention to sources of power and privilege), and engaged pedagogy (the protection of students' security and well-being). Incorporating these concepts into pedagogical practices can create safe and productive classroom spaces for all, including those most vulnerable and at risk of being "unhomed" by conventional hierarchies and oppressive social structures. This model then can be translated through a parallel process from classroom to clinic, such that empowered, engaged, and cared-for learners become empowering, engaging, and caring clinicians.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25945967     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000743

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


  10 in total

1.  Site, Sector, Scope: Mapping the Epistemological Landscape of Health Humanities.

Authors:  Andrea Charise
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2017-12

2.  Keeping out and getting in: reframing emergency department gatekeeping as structural competence.

Authors:  Mara Buchbinder
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2017-04-19

3.  New Medicine for the U.S. Health Care System: Training Physicians for Structural Interventions.

Authors:  Helena Hansen; Jonathan M Metzl
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2017-03       Impact factor: 6.893

4.  Structural Competency in the U.S. Healthcare Crisis: Putting Social and Policy Interventions Into Clinical Practice.

Authors:  H Hansen; J Metzl
Journal:  J Bioeth Inq       Date:  2016-05-13       Impact factor: 1.352

5.  Structural competency in emergency medical education: A scoping review and operational framework.

Authors:  Bisan A Salhi; Amy Zeidan; Christine R Stehman; Sarah Kleinschmidt; E Liang Liu; Kristen Bascombe; Kian Preston-Suni; Melissa H White; Jeff Druck; Bernard L Lopez; Margaret E Samuels-Kalow
Journal:  AEM Educ Train       Date:  2022-06-23

6.  Power Day: Addressing the Use and Abuse of Power in Medical Training.

Authors:  Nancy R Angoff; Laura Duncan; Nichole Roxas; Helena Hansen
Journal:  J Bioeth Inq       Date:  2016-03-15       Impact factor: 1.352

7.  Developing Humanistic Competencies Within the Competency-Based Curriculum.

Authors:  Satendra Singh; Upreet Dhaliwal; Navjeevan Singh
Journal:  Indian Pediatr       Date:  2020-08-29       Impact factor: 1.411

8.  Beyond empathy: a qualitative exploration of arts and humanities in pre-professional (baccalaureate) health education.

Authors:  Marcela Costa; Emilia Kangasjarvi; Andrea Charise
Journal:  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract       Date:  2020-02-25       Impact factor: 3.853

9.  Emotional Impact of Illness and Care on Patients with Advanced Kidney Disease.

Authors:  Ann M O'Hare; Claire Richards; Jackie Szarka; Lynne V McFarland; Whitney Showalter; Elizabeth K Vig; Rebecca L Sudore; Susan T Crowley; Ranak Trivedi; Janelle S Taylor
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2018-07-06       Impact factor: 8.237

10.  Seeing the Window, Finding the Spider: Applying Critical Race Theory to Medical Education to Make Up Where Biomedical Models and Social Determinants of Health Curricula Fall Short.

Authors:  Jennifer Tsai; Edwin Lindo; Khiara Bridges
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2021-07-09
  10 in total

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