| Literature DB >> 30810510 |
Neha Mukunda1, Nazanin Moghbeli1, Adam Rizzo2, Suzannah Niepold2, Barbara Bassett2, Horace M DeLisser1.
Abstract
The humanities have been increasingly incorporated into medical school curricula in order to promote clinical skills and professional formation. To understand its current use, we reviewed the literature on visual arts training in medical education, including relevant qualitative and quantitative data. Common themes that emerged from this review included a focus on preclinical students; instruction promoting observation, diagnostic skills, empathy, team building, communication skills, resilience, and cultural sensitivity. Successful partnerships have involved local art museums, with sessions led primarily by art educators employing validated pedagogy such as Visual Thinking Strategies or Artful Thinking. There is evidence that structured visual arts curricula can facilitate the development of clinical observational skills, although these studies are limited in that they have been single-institution reports, short term, involved small numbers of students and often lacked controls. There is a paucity of rigorous published data demonstrating that medial student art education training promotes empathy, team building, communication skills, wellness and resilience, or cultural sensitivity. Given these concerns, recommendations are offered for fostering more robust, evidence-based approaches for using visual arts instruction in the training of medical students.Entities:
Keywords: Artful Thinking; Medical humanities; Visual Thinking Strategies; observation skills; visual arts
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30810510 PMCID: PMC6394328 DOI: 10.1080/10872981.2018.1558657
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Summary of selected programs.
| School, program name | Targeted audience | Museum/community partnership | Session number | Session duration (hours) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baylor College of Medicine, ‘Art of the Human Body’ | Medical Students, year unspecified | Houston Museum of Fine Arts | 4 | 2 |
| Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Weill Cornell Medical College, ‘Observation and Uncertainty in Art and Medicine’ | MS1 | Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City | 6 | 2 |
| Harvard Medical School, ‘Training the Eye: Improving the Art of Physical Diagnosis’ | MS1 | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston | 9 | 2.5 |
| Icahn School of Medicine, ‘The Pulse of Art’ | MS1 | Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum | 11 | 1.5 |
| Perelman School of Medicine, ‘Art, Observation, and Empathy’ | MS1 | Philadelphia Museum of Art | 7 | 1.5 |
| Rush Medical College, ‘Humanities in Medicine’ | MS1 | The Art Institute of Chicago | 18 | ? |
| University of Buffalo, ‘Learning to Look: An Artist’s Remedy to the Physician’s Perspective’ | MS1-MS3 | Expressive Visual Arts program for adult and adolescent inpatients, Aspire of WNY, Inc., Aspire Center for Learning | 8 | 2 |
| University of Cincinnati, ‘Art of the Clinical Encounter’ | Medical Students, year unspecified | Cincinnati Art Museum | 6 | 1.5 |
| University of Washington, ‘Visual Thinking: How to Observe in Depth’ | MS1, MS2 | Henry Art Gallery, Seattle Art Museum, Frye Art Museum | 10 | 1.5 |
| UT Health San Antonio, ‘Art Rounds’ | Interprofessional (nursing and medical students) | McNay Art Museum | 8 | 1.5 |
| UT Southwestern, ‘The Art of Examination’ | MS1, MS2 | Dallas Museum of Art, Nasher Sculpture Center, The Warehouse, The Crow Collection of Asian Art | 7 | 2 |
MS1, MS2, and MS3 are respectively, medical student years 1, 2, and 3.
Key components to visual arts in medicine courses. Five categories were identified (clinical observation/diagnosis, empathy, team building/communication, promoting wellness/preventing burnout, and cultural sensitivity). Several examples are presented here, along with illustrative activities and relevant goals/objectives pertaining to each one.
| Category | Examples of schools | Example of relevant activity or goal/objective |
|---|---|---|
| Harvard Medical School | Paired guided museum visits (based on VTS) with clinical lectures to establish correlations with observational skills and diagnosis/physical exam | |
| UT Health Science Center, San Antonio | Students choose ‘Art Patient’ at the beginning of the course, and visit the artwork for at least 20 min in observation each time they are at the museum; | |
| UT Southwestern | ‘Drawers and Describers’ – one student describes portrait and the other draws, followed by discussion of challenges of physical exam | |
| Baylor College of Medicine | ||
| Perelman School of Medicine | ||
| Rush Medical College | ||
| University of Cincinnati | Consecutive sessions on interpretation, mood, emotional response, and reflection, guiding students to understand the psychological mood evoked by an artist and the students’ emotional reaction | |
| Perelman School of Medicine | Students share individual reflections each week to foster trust and collaborative communication; ‘Back-to-Back Describe and Draw’ activity with partners | |
| Baylor College of Medicine | Session on ‘Constructing Narrative’ where students work together to interpret art and construct a collaborative story | |
| Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Weill Cornell Medical College | ‘Verbal Imaging’ – one student is ‘blinded’ and told to create a mental image while other students describe a piece of artwork in detail. Student then looks at painting to compare mental visualization with actual image | |
| University of Buffalo | ‘To learn how art can enhance one’s personal growth as a physician’ | |
| Rush Medical College | ||
| UT Southwestern | Guided mindfulness, journal assignment on self-care | |
| Icahn School of Medicine | ||
| University of Cincinnati | ‘Identify one’s own biases and perceptions as integral elements of interpretation through examination of the cultural, ethnic, age and gender context of subjects depicted in photographs and portraiture.’ | |
| Baylor College of Medicine | Session on ‘Understanding Bias,’ discussing depictions of the human form in art and compares cross-cultural art forms to identify ideals and biases | |
| Perelman School of Medicine | Weeks 5 and 6 involve ‘Perspective Taking’, where students imagine artwork from various perspectives and create narratives for the people in artwork and photographs. Educators choose artwork from multiple cultures and artwork that depicts interactions between people of different backgrounds |
Selected program components of interest with examples of each.
| Program component | Examples of schools | Descriptions |
|---|---|---|
| Harvard Medical School | Clinical lectures focusing on visual diagnosis and physical exam from various specialties (Radiology, Dermatology, Neurology); clinical Rounds where students examine patients with course faculty | |
| University of Buffalo | “Art Activity Clinical Experience Sites”; Standardized Patient Post-Assessment | |
| University of Cincinnati | Students attend one monthly half day session with faculty, where they initially record patient descriptions, and work towards full describe/interpret/reflect by course end | |
| Icahn School of Medicine | ‘Skin Deep’ – students paint dermatologic conditions in own skin shade | |
| UT Health Science Center, San Antonio | Collaboration between nursing, medical, and school of allied health. Students from different disciplines are paired for ‘Art Patient’ activity and are required to complete assignments as a team | |
| Icahn School of Medicine | Sessions including ‘Picturing Pandemic Disease: From Plague to Ebola’; ‘ | |
| Rush Medical College | Use of theater to explore role of body language, movement, and enacting role of patient and doctor on stage; Building auditory skills to explore how vocal sounds reveal emotion | |
| Various Schools | Suggested vs. mandatory weekly readings/videos (articles, Ted Talks), written/drawn reflections, clinical descriptions/sketches of patients, attending additional museum programs, final presentation | |
| Harvard Medical School | Sketchbook journal given to all students at the beginning of the course to encourage habitual drawing, ongoing reflection, and connections between art and the physical exam | |
| University of Buffalo | Paired ‘studio session’ with each class – activities include self-portrait drawings, paint and dye on cloth/fabric, figure drawing, and clay figure sculpting | |
| Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Weill Cornell Medical College, ‘Observation and Uncertainty in Art and Medicine’ | Sketch memories, associations, and/or emotions associated with observing artwork |