Abstract

BackgroundArt -based interventions are widely used in medical education. However, data on the potential effects of art-based interventions on medical students have been limited to small qualitative studies on students’ evaluation of elective programs, and thus their findings may be difficult to generalize. The goal of this study is to examine, in an unselected students’ population, the effect of students’ gender, ethnicity and attitude towards poetry on their evaluation of a clinically-integrated poetry-based educational intervention.MethodsA required Clinically- Oriented Poetry-reading Experience (COPE) is integrated into the 4th year internal medicine clerkship. We constructed a questionnaire regarding the program’s effects on students. Students completed the questionnaire at the end of the clerkship. We performed a Confirmatory Factor Analysis, and examined the relationship between students’ evaluation of the program and students’ ethnicity, gender, attitude towards poetry-reading, and the timing of the program (early/late) during the fourth year.Results144 students participated in the program, of which 112 completed the questionnaires. We identified two effect factors: “student-patient” and “self and colleagues”. The average score for “student-patient” factor was significantly higher as compared to the “self and colleagues” factor.Evaluation the “student- patient” effect factor was higher among Arab and Druze as compared to Jewish students. Students’ attitude towards poetry-reading did not correlate with the “student-patient” effect, but correlated with the “self and colleagues” effect. The evaluation of the “self and colleagues” effect was higher among students who participated in the program during their second as compared with the first clerkship. Students’ gender was not associated with any of the effects identified. Students favored obligatory participation in COPE as compared with elective course format.ConclusionsAccording to students’ evaluation, a format of integrated, obligatory poetry-based intervention may be suitable for enhancing “student-patient” aims in heterogeneous student populations. The higher evaluation of the “patient-student” effect among Arab and Druze as compared to Jewish students may be related to cultural differences in the perception of this component of medical professionalism. Further research can provide insight into the effect of cultural and ethnic differences on actual empathy of medical students in patient encounters.

Highlights

  • Art -based interventions are widely used in medical education

  • One half of each class begins with the internal medicine clerkship, and continues to pediatrics and half of the class starts in pediatrics and proceeds to a clerkship in internal medicine

  • Factor 2 (“self and colleagues”) was higher among students who participated in the program during their second 4th year clerkship, with borderline statistical significance (4.78 ± 1.46 vs 4.20 ± 1.61, p = 0.047) (Figure 1, Panel 1D)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Art -based interventions are widely used in medical education. data on the potential effects of art-based interventions on medical students have been limited to small qualitative studies on students’ evaluation of elective programs, and their findings may be difficult to generalize. While programs in medical humanities and in narrative medicine have existed in many medical schools [3], evaluation of art-based interventions for undergraduate medical students has been limited [4], and includes mainly qualitative evaluation of elective medical humanities courses [4]. These studies provide important insights into students’ perceptions of the effects of art-based interventions. Such effects include, in addition to increased awareness of patients’ experiences of illness, enhanced capabilities of communication, analysis, presentation, writing and clinical reasoning, imagination, observation, and awareness of language [5-9]. The effect of factors that can potentially affect curriculum planning, such as diversity in students’ ethnicity, gender, and attitude towards the arts, as well as the timing of the program during medical studies, have not been adequately evaluated

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call