期刊论文详细信息
BMC Medical Education
Clinical realism: a new literary genre and a potential tool for encouraging empathy in medical students
Gregoire Risser1  Amos Meir1  Dorrie Imeson1  Simon Doyle1  Rachel Barratt1  Katy Ashton1  Paula McDonald2 
[1] Medical student Manchester Medical School, Manchester, England;Clinical Lecturer Manchester Medical School, Manchester, England
关键词: Clinical realism;    Affinity;    Empathy;    Creative writing;    Medical humanities;    Medical education;   
Others  :  1222286
DOI  :  10.1186/s12909-015-0372-8
 received in 2014-10-07, accepted in 2015-05-08,  发布年份 2015
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【 摘 要 】

Background

Empathy has been re-discovered as a desirable quality in doctors. A number of approaches using the medical humanities have been advocated to teach empathy to medical students. This paper describes a new approach using the medium of creative writing and a new narrative genre: clinical realism.

Methods

Third year students were offered a four week long Student Selected Component (SSC) in Narrative Medicine and Creative Writing. The creative writing element included researching and creating a character with a life-changing physical disorder without making the disorder the focus of the writing. The age, gender, social circumstances and physical disorder of a character were randomly allocated to each student. The students wrote repeated assignments in the first person, writing as their character and including details of living with the disorder in all of their narratives. This article is based on the work produced by the 2013 cohort of students taking the course, and on their reflections on the process of creating their characters. Their output was analysed thematically using a constructivist approach to meaning making.

Results

This preliminary analysis suggests that the students created convincing and detailed narratives which included rich information about living with a chronic disorder. Although the writing assignments were generic, they introduced a number of themes relating to illness, including stigma, personal identity and narrative wreckage. Some students reported that they found it difficult to relate to “their” character initially, but their empathy for the character increased as the SSC progressed.

Conclusion

Clinical realism combined with repeated writing exercises about the same character is a potential tool for helping to develop empathy in medical students and merits further investigation.

【 授权许可】

   
2015 Mcdonald et al.

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