Abstract
This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. Over the past 50 years, advances in medical technology have revolutionised the medical landscape. The ways in which patients, their families, and health professionals connect and interact together in the medical endeavour have also changed. At the same time as advances in medical technology resulted in tremendous gains for society, criticism began emerging that the patient as a whole person had been overshadowed by the disease the person had. The interface of medicine and the humanities concerns itself with our relationships with others, the ways in which we confront challenges to our mortality, how we understand human behaviour, and the meanings we give to situations within the medical context. In this paper we outline the genesis of a medical humanities programme at the University of Auckland, and how the programme has advanced over the past twenty years. The programme promotes important social aspects of medicine such as cultural competence and person-centred engaged care. It also encourages students to improve their academic and reflective writing skills. We discuss how one course within the programme promotes student cultural awareness of - and responsiveness to - Maori people and Deaf people. Specific attention is paid to current leading pedagogy, as well as how the use of space and language contribute to student learning. We conclude that medical humanities remains an essential and valued element in medical curricula.
Highlights
Over the past 50 years, advances in medical technology have revolutionised the medical landscape
At the same time as advances in medical technology resulted in tremendous gains for society, criticism began emerging that the patient as a whole person had been overshadowed by the disease the person had
William Osler had been perceptive to the whole person, noting more than one hundred years ago that, "it is much more important to know what sort of a patient has a disease than what sort of a disease a patient has" (John, 2013). To put this another way, at the heart of medicine lies human activity and humanity (Evans and Greaves, 1999; Chiapperino and Boniolo, 2014). The interface of both medicine and the humanities is concerned with our relationships with others, the ways in which we confront challenges to our mortality, how we understand human behaviour, and the meanings we give to situations within the medical context
Summary
Over the past 50 years, advances in medical technology have revolutionised the medical landscape. We include some examples of student’s work to illustrate their learning about cultural competence and patient-engaged practices of care. Ensuring that courses were relevant to medicine and to medical students, reflected the importance of student engagement as well as how the humanities can contribute to understanding the human condition, and to improving how doctors respond to their patients.
Published Version
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