| Literature DB >> 36168537 |
Katharine R Meacham1, Ira Sloan1, Robyn A Latessa1.
Abstract
This article presents the results of a decade's experiment in creating a longitudinal ethics and humanism curriculum for the core clinical year at UNC School of Medicine, North Carolina, United States. This curriculum applies published research on best practices in medical ethics education. Sample comments from course evaluations of the students who have completed this curriculum provide support for its success at achieving its desired learning outcomes. To create a similar ethics curriculum in the core clinical year at other medical schools, there are twelve practical tips: preparation: read the research on the ethical challenges for medical students; recruit an interdisciplinary teaching team; create cohorts for this aspect of the curriculum that will stay together for the year; grade only with pass/fail; have the students bring the cases from their clinical experiences; feed them if possible, and structure the time together carefully. Use a narrative ethics methodology and introduce alternative methods for student writing and group process. Connect students with literature in medical humanities and bioethics and encourage publication of their narratives. As with any good creation, the whole is more than the sum of its parts, and each campus can adapt these guidelines for their people and programs. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: bioethics; clinical clerkships; clinical ethics; humanism in medicine; medical education; medical ethics; medical school curriculum; narrative ethics
Year: 2022 PMID: 36168537 PMCID: PMC9370080 DOI: 10.12688/mep.19022.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MedEdPublish (2016) ISSN: 2312-7996
Figure 1. STORY Model for Doing Narrative Bioethics .
This figure represents a process for doing narrative bioethics with clerkship medical students. Begin with a case a student has experienced—rich with tensions. Then work STORY together: S: students identify various stakeholders in this situation. Small groups imagine those different stakeholders’ perspectives, return to the large group and tell the story from that perspective. T: the tensions among the different perspectives are identified as stakeholders speak. O: together, the group imagines options for resolution of these tensions at this time. R: resolution of this situation and reflect on it. Y: return to the first student and see how processing this case can be integrated into future work.