Abstract

Objective This study investigated how students as stakeholders viewed behavioral and social science (BSS) content in a preclinical longitudinal course entitled “Medicine, Body, and Society” (MBS) at UT Health San Antonio Long School of Medicine (LSOM). We present students’ perceptions of successes and challenges tied to “altruism” and other non-biomedical objectives outlined by this institution. Methods We conducted a qualitative thematic analysis of MBS course evaluation data. Two researchers independently performed initial coding followed by interrater reliability checks to revise codes and a final MAXQDA lexical search to refine three themes. Results Three major themes emerged: (1) Students shared pedagogical preferences strongly favoring stories. (2) Students detected deficits in the module content tied to identities. (3) Students labelled BSS content as “soft,” “subjective,” and “siloed” which confounded its role in the course. Conclusions Advancing altruism aligned with BSS content in preclinical medical education remains a challenge. A closer review of student evaluations framed as learner-centeredness is key to a greater understanding and resolution of competency issues in preclinical curriculum and its impact on mastery in subsequent clinical education and practice.

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