Abstract

Medical humanity is an essential element of medical education, and the respective courses are introduced to the curricula of medical schools worldwide. However, significant differences in this type of medical education were identified in Italy, Spain, and the UK. In Poland, this issue was not yet analyzed. The classes offered on a compulsory and not elective basis secure the uniform skills of future physicians. Therefore, we were prompted to ask a question: do Polish medical students receive equal compulsory education in medical humanities? To answer that question, we performed a content analysis of mandatory classes’ frequency, types, and content on medical humanization and communication in Polish medical schools. The study used publicly available information provided on the home pages of the universities to perform content and comparative analyses. Of 22 identified universities, 15 had publicly listed teaching programs, and nine had freely available syllabi. The names and types of courses varied from school to school. The number of hours the courses offered throughout medical education ranged from 15 to 216. In some medical schools, the classes were scheduled during the early, pre-clinical part of the study, whereas in other schools they were offered each year. The content of the courses always covered the topics of physician–patient communication but rarely offered protocols, such as the Calgary Cambridge guide. We conclude that the medical humanities represented by medical humanization and communication courses are included in the publicly available compulsory curriculum of most Polish medical schools. However, to secure equal education of future Polish physicians, there is a need to unify the medical humanities program.

Highlights

  • Medical humanities embrace modeling the view on medicine via a humanistic approach, enriching the medical team’s competence, and improving patient–physician relations [1]

  • It is no surprise that the presence, content, duration, and format of courses concerning medical humanization and humanities vary between the medical schools

  • The previous publications focused on teaching anthropology, history, language studies, literature, music, philosophy, religion and theology, sociology, or visual arts, whereas we focused on teaching medical communication and the humanization of medicine as core medical competencies

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Summary

Introduction

Medical humanities embrace modeling the view on medicine via a humanistic approach (e.g., arts or history), enriching the medical team’s competence, and improving patient–physician relations [1]. The importance of medical humanities as feeding the healthcare and medicine humanization and the incorporation of respective courses in the curricula of medical schools have long been recognized, and the social and ethical aspects of medicine already started to be included in medical programs in North America in the. In 2014, there were about 2600 medical schools globally [3], and the equivalence of their teaching program concerning main professional subjects was challenging to assess. It is no surprise that the presence, content, duration, and format of courses concerning medical humanization and humanities vary between the medical schools. A need for further extension of curricula in some medical schools, e.g., by teaching bioethics [6], has been identified

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