The orphan child: humanities in modern medical education
- PMID: 30616581
- PMCID: PMC6322292
- DOI: 10.1186/s13010-018-0067-y
The orphan child: humanities in modern medical education
Abstract
Use of humanities content in American medical education has been debated for well over 60 years. While many respected scholars and medical educators have purported the value of humanities content in medical training, its inclusion remains unstandardized, and the undergraduate medical curriculum continues to be focused on scientific and technical content. Cited barriers to the integration of humanities include time and space in an already overburdened curriculum, and a lack of consensus on the exact content, pedagogy and instruction. Edmund Pellegrino, physician and scholar of the latter twentieth century, spent much of his professional life promoting the value and importance of the humanities in medical education, seeking the best way to incorporate and teach this content in clinically relevant ways. His efforts included the founding of multiple enterprises starting in the 1960s and 1970s to promote human values in medical education, including the Society for Health and Human Values and its Institute on Human Values in Medicine. Regardless of his efforts and those of many others into the current century, the medical humanities remains a curricular orphan, unable to find a lasting home in medical education and training.
Conflict of interest statement
Ethics approval and consent to participate
This essay is the product of a larger study reviewed by Emory University IRB, Study Number IRB00087873 and determined Exempt on 6/22/2016.
Consent for publication
Not Applicable.
Competing interests
There are no competing interests.
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References
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- Feinstein AR. Clinical judgement. Baltimore: The Williams & Wilkins Company; 1967.
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- Pellegrino ED. Humanism and the physician. Knoxville: University of Tennesee Press; 1979.
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- Pellegrino, Edmund D. The Philosophy of Medicine Reborn: A Pellegrino Reader. Notre Dame Studies in Medical Ethics. Edited by Jr. and Fabrice Jotterand H. Tristram Englehardt Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 2008.
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