Literature DB >> 28458333

Emphasizing humanities in medical education: Promoting the integration of medical scientific spirit and medical humanistic spirit.

Peipei Song1,2, Wei Tang3.   

Abstract

In the era of the biological-psychological-social medicine model, an ideal of modern medicine is to enhance the humanities in medical education, to foster medical talents with humanistic spirit, and to promote the integration of scientific spirit and humanistic spirit in medicine. Throughout the United States (US), United Kingdom (UK), other Western countries, and some Asian countries like Japan, many medical universities have already integrated the learning of medical humanities in their curricula and recognized their value. While in China, although medical education reform over the past decade has emphasized the topic of medical humanities to increase the professionalism of future physicians, the integration of medical humanity courses in medical universities has lagged behind the pace in Western countries. In addition, current courses in medical humanities were arbitrarily established due to a lack of organizational independence. For various reasons like a shortage of instructors, medical universities have failed to pay sufficient attention to medical humanities education given the urgent needs of society. The medical problems in contemporary Chinese society are not solely the purview of biomedical technology; what matters more is enhancing the humanities in medical education and fostering medical talents with humanistic spirit. Emphasizing the humanities in medical education and promoting the integration of medical scientific spirit and medical humanistic spirit have become one of the most pressing issues China must address. Greater attention should be paid to reasonable integration of humanities into the medical curriculum, creation of medical courses related to humanities and optimization of the curriculum, and actively allocating abundant teaching resources and exploring better methods of instruction.

Keywords:  Chinese medical students; Medical humanities; healthcare; medical education

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28458333     DOI: 10.5582/bst.2017.01092

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosci Trends        ISSN: 1881-7815            Impact factor:   2.400


  6 in total

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5.  Development and validation of the cancer symptoms discrimination scale: a cross-sectional survey of students in Yunnan, China.

Authors:  Lin-Sen Feng; Zheng-Jiao Dong; Ruo-Yu Yan; Chang-Ling Tu; Lan-Yu Zhang; Jiang-Yun Shen; Shi-Yu Zhang
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6.  Thinking outside the box: students positive about visionary elective curricula in medical school.

Authors:  Sven Olaf Rohr; Ameli Gerhard; Felicitas Schmidt; Julia Eder; Lukas Salvermoser; Konstantinos Dimitriadis; Martin R Fischer
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  6 in total

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