Medical Humanities and Their Discontents: Definitions, Critiques, and Implications

被引:154
作者
Shapiro, Johanna [1 ]
Coulehan, Jack
Wear, Delese [2 ]
Montello, Martha [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Irvine, Sch Med, Program Med Humanities & Arts, Irvine, CA 92717 USA
[2] Northeastern Ohio Univ Coll Med & Pharm, Rootstown, OH 44272 USA
[3] Univ Kansas, Sch Med, Kansas City, KS USA
关键词
SCHOOL-OF-MEDICINE; STUDENTS PERCEPTIONS; NARRATIVE MEDICINE; PROFESSIONALISM; PHYSICIAN; ENVIRONMENT; VIEWPOINT; AWARENESS; EMPATHY; ETHICS;
D O I
10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181938bca
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
The humanities offer great potential for enhancing professional and humanistic development in medical education. Yet, although many students report benefit from exposure to the humanities in their medical education, they also offer consistent complaints and skepticism. The authors offer a pedagogical definition of the medical humanities, linking it to medicine as a practice profession. They then explore three student critiques of medical humanities curricula: (1) the content critique, examining issues of perceived relevance and intellectual bait-and-switch, (2) the teaching critique, which examines instructor trustworthiness and perceived personal intrusiveness, and (3) the structural/placement critique, or how and when medical humanities appear in the curriculum, Next, ways are suggested to tailor medical humanities to better acknowledge and reframe the needs of medical students. These include ongoing cross-disciplinary reflective practices in which intellectual tools of the humanities are incorporated into educational activities to help students examine and, at times, contest the process, values, and goals of medical practice. This systematic, pervasive reflection will organically lead to meaningful contributions from the medical humanities in three specific areas of great interest to medical educators: professionalism, "narrativity," and educational competencies. Regarding pedagogy, the implications of this, approach are an integrated required curriculum and innovative concepts such as "applied humanities scholars." In turn, systematic integration of humanities perspectives and ways of thinking into clinical training will usefully expand the range of metaphors and narratives available to reflect on medical practice and offer possibilities for deepening and strengthening professional education.
引用
收藏
页码:192 / 198
页数:7
相关论文
共 72 条
[61]   Training the clinical eye and mind: using the arts to develop medical students' observational and pattern recognition skills [J].
Shapiro, J ;
Rucker, L ;
Beck, J .
MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2006, 40 (03) :263-268
[62]   Just a spoonful of humanities makes the medicine go down: introducing literature into a family medicine clerkship [J].
Shapiro, J ;
Duke, A ;
Boker, J ;
Ahearn, CS .
MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2005, 39 (06) :605-612
[63]  
SHILDRICK M, 1997, LEAK BODIES BOUNDARI
[64]  
Sontag Susan., 2001, ILLNESS METAPHOR AID
[65]   Promoting critical thinking in health care: Phronesis and criticality [J].
Tyreman S. .
Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy, 2000, 3 (2) :117-124
[66]  
van Roessel P., 2006, Journal for Learning through the Arts, V2, P1
[67]   Can compassion be taught? Let's ask our students [J].
Wear, Delese ;
Zarconi, Joseph .
JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2008, 23 (07) :948-953
[68]   Rituals of verification: The role of simulation in developing and evaluating empathic communication [J].
Wear, Delese ;
Varley, Joseph D. .
PATIENT EDUCATION AND COUNSELING, 2008, 71 (02) :153-156
[69]   On Outcomes and Humility [J].
Wear, Delese .
ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2008, 83 (07) :625-626
[70]   Attributes of excellent attending-physician role models [J].
Wright, SM ;
Kern, DE ;
Kolodner, K ;
Howard, DM ;
Brancati, FL .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1998, 339 (27) :1986-1993