Medical humanities is an interdisciplinary field of medicine which includes the humanities (philosophy of medicine, medical ethics and bioethics, history of medicine, literary studies and religion), social science (psychology, medical sociology, medical anthropology, cultural studies, health geography) and the arts (literature, theater, film, and visual arts) and their application to medical education and practice.
Medical humanities uses interdisciplinary research to explore experiences of health and illness, often focusing on subjective, hidden, or invisible experience. This interdisciplinary strength has given the field a noted diversity and encouraged creative 'epistemological innovation'.
Medical humanities is sometimes conflated with health humanities which also broadly links health and social care disciplines with the arts and humanities.
The first department of humanities in a medical school was established in the Hershey Medical Center at Pennsylvania State University in 1967. After the establishment of that department other schools around the country began to follow.
Medical Humanities were created at first as something a clergy would perform. Medical Humanities began as palliative care unlike hospice care, palliative care would elevate pain and still look for cures to your illness. It soon expanded to something all future physicians would learn and apply to everyday interactions not just in clinical settings. The humanistic sciences are relevant when multiple people’s perspectives on issues are compiled together to answer questions or even create questions. The arts can provide additional perspective to the sciences.
Critical medical humanities is an approach which argues that the arts and humanities have more to offer to healthcare than simply improving medical education. It proposes that the arts and humanities offer different ways of thinking about human history, culture, behaviour and experience which can be used to dissect, critique and influence healthcare practices and priorities.
Translational medical humanities is a related, more applied approach that examines how insights from the humanities can contribute directly to improvements in health and healthcare, extending beyond critical analysis.
The arts
Medical books, pictures, and diagrams help medical students build an appreciation for anything in the medical field from the human body to diseases.
The medical humanities can assist medical practitioners with viewing issues from more than one perspective, such as the visual arts and culture are supposed to do. Both patients and doctors/medical professionals deal with facing decision-making. Each person’s perspective of medical ethics is different from one another due to different cultures, religions, societies, and traditions. The humanities also assist and attempt to create a closer or more meaningful relationship between medical practitioners and their peers/patients.
Bioethics, though a subcategory of Medical Humanities also encompasses additional branches such as environmental and animal ethics. influential books such as Moral and Medicine: The Moral Problems of the Patient's right to know the Truth, Contraception, Artificial Insemination, Sterilization, and Euthanasia (Fletcher 1954) and Ramsey's ground was a serious and urgent need for thinking about complex moral issues in medicine and there by facilitated the creation of the new academic discipline of medical ethics (also known as bioethics).
Clinical ethics
The second category in ethics of the medical humanities is clinical ethics, which refers to the respect that healthcare professionals have for patients and families, and this helps develop a sort of professionalism, respectability, and expertise that healthcare professionals must use in respect to their patients.
Various academic institutions offer courses of study in the ethics of medical humanities. These programs help their students learn professionalism in the medical field so that they may respectfully help their patients and do what it is right in any situation that may arise.
In recent years, educators and researches have increasingly examined how medical humanities can be systematically integrated into modern medical training to improve empathy, communication skills, and clinician well - being, suggesting that narrative and reflective practices may help balance technical training with humanistic care.
A 2016 review by Dennhardt et al. analyzed quantitative outcome studies and suggested that medical humanities programs can influence empathy, communication, and professional identity formation in medical students.
Following changes to the MCAT in 2015, more U.S medical schools have formally incorporated humanities coursework into their curricula, reflecting a broader recognition of its educational value.
A 2023 mixed-methods study examining 31 U.S medical schools found significant variation in how institutions define and implement medical humanities programs, for example, some schools offer standalone humanities majors or concentrations while others integrate humanities content across existing clinical courses, and the study noted that available information was often incomplete or inconsistent across institutions.
Literature and medicine
Formerly called medicine in literature, literature and medicine is an interdisciplinary subfield of the medical humanities considered a "dialogue rather than a merger" between the literary and the medical. Literature and medicine is flourishing in undergraduate programs and in medical schools at all levels. The Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine-Hershey was the first to introduce literature into a medical school curriculum when Joanne Trautmann (Banks), an English professor, was appointed to a position in literature there in 1972. The rationale for using literature and medicine in medical education is three-fold: reading the stories of patients and writing about their experiences gives doctors in training the tools they need to better understand their patients; discussing and reflecting on literature brings the medical practitioner's biases and assumptions into focus, heightening awareness; and reading literature requires critical thinking and empathetic awareness about moral issues in medicine.
See also
- Biopolitics
- Cinemeducation, the use of film in medical education
- Disability studies
- Health communication
- Health humanities
- Medical anthropology
- Medical journalism
- Medical literature
- Narrative medicine
- Graphic medicine
- Philosophy of medicine
- Philosophy of healthcare
- Public health
References
Further reading
- http://philpapers.org/rec/HARWAS
- Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database http://medhum.med.nyu.edu (includes works and issues)
- Literature and Medicine Series https://www.kentstateuniversitypress.com/category/series/lit_med/
- Literature and Medicine Track, Georgetown University School of Medicine https://web.archive.org/web/20160707114840/http://som.georgetown.edu/academics/lamt
- https://web.archive.org/web/20160818092843/http://www.fondazionelanza.it/medicalhumanities/texts/Jones%20AH,%20Literature%20and%20medicine%20an%20evolving%20canon.pdf
- Teaching Literature and Medicine: Ken Kesey's One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest. https://www.cpcc.edu/taltp/archives/.../file
- Literature and Medicine, 1982 journal
External links
- Medical Humanities (Articles)
- Medical Humanities
- Medical Humanities (Blog)
- Journal of Medical Humanities
- Centre for Medical Humanities, Durham University (Blog)
- Medicinae Humanistica (Blog)
- Medical Humanities Research Centre (MHRC), University of Glasgow
- SCOPE: The Health Humanities Learning Lab, University of Toronto
- Northwest Narrative Medicine Collaborative - community of narrative medicine, medical humanities, and health humanities practitioners in the U.S. Pacific Northwest
