Friday, October 23, 2009

Arts Gaining Momentum in Medical Education



Arts Alive and Thriving in Medical Education

It has been reported that the use of arts and humanities in medical education may help develop observational skills and enhance understanding of the human condition. Programs integrating the arts and humanities in medical education continue to flourish and gain momentum with leading medical schools offering programming such as Stanford School of Medicine, Arts, Humanities and Medicine, established to “promote creative and scholarly work at the intersections between the arts, humanities and medicine in order to enhance our understanding of the contextual meanings of illness, healthcare, and the human condition.” 1 In Canada, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Humanities in Medicine, offers five core initiatives: History of Medicine; Narrative Medicine (oral storytelling film, mass media, and literature); Music; Spirituality; and Visual Arts. 2 The Arts and Humanities in Health and Medicine Program at the University of Alberta was launched in May 2006. The program is directed to engendering a balance of scientific knowledge and compassionate care with a mission statement that formally acknowledges “the explicit recognition within the Faculty that clinical practice is both an art and a science.” 3

The arts are alive and thriving in medical education today, offering opportunities for learning and a place for self expression and healing. A leader in the field of Narrative Medicine, Dr. Rita Charon, Professor of Clinical Medicine and Director of the Program in Narrative Medicine at the Columbia University 4 has long advocated for the use of narrative in medical education to honour stories of illness. Dr. Arthur Frank, Professor of Sociology, University of Calgary, and author of “The Wounded Storyteller, Body, Illness and Ethics”, writes about the meaningful uses of storytelling for those experiencing illness, “The personal issue of telling stories about illness is to give voice to the body, so the changed body can become once again familiar in these stories.” 5

In our current issue of IJCAIP, http://www.ijcaip.com, "Physicians Speak Out About Arts in Medicine" we've offered physicians a place to voice their stories and share how they use the arts in education.
Our featured article in issue 8 of The International Journal of the Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice IJCAIP, “Stories and Society, Using Literature to Teach Medical Students About Public Health and Social Justice,” has been contributed by Martin Donohoe, MD, FACP, Adjunct Associate Professor, School of Community Health, Portland State University and Senior Physician of Internal Medicine at The Kaiser Sunnyside Medical Centre. Donohoe offers an argument for “enhancing public health education of medical students through the use of literature with the goal of creating activist physicians knowledgeable about, and eager to confront, the social, economic and cultural contributions to illness”. He has also generously provided an extensive list of books, articles and resources. A follow up commentary by Jay Rosenfield, MD, MEd, FRCPC, Vice-Dean of Undergraduate Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, stresses the need for continuing research to examine the use of literature and story in medical education further, particularly when linked to advocacy and health of populations and patient outcomes.

Maureen Rappaport MD, FCCFP, is a family doctor who splits her time between working in a busy community practice in Montreal , Quebec, and teaching family medicine residents and medical students. In the article, “The Poetry of Practice” she writes about the creative writing course she teaches as an elective to fourth year medical students at McGill University, a course that provides an important place for students to express their feelings through narratives and poetry.

Physician and Educator Pippa Hall MD, CCFP, MEd, FCFP, at The University of Ottawa, has been a palliative care physician for over ten years. She has integrated arts into learning activities for pre-licensure students and in post graduate programs as well as in continuing professional development activities in nursing and spiritual care. She explains how she has found the arts in many forms provide opportunities for learning while offering new insights into the human condition.

Seema Shah, MD, MSPH, offers a unique perspective as both a physician and patient who has experienced chronic illness. Working with The University of British Columbia Community Partnerships for Health Professional Education Initiative, she facilitated group sessions using literature and story to help teach students about the lived experience of illness.

Our closing commentary explores the exciting potential for other innovative and creative technologies incorporated into teaching and medical education. Kim Bullock, MD, family medicine and emergency room physician, and Director of the Community Health Division and Assistant Director of Service Learning in the Department of Family Medicine at Georgetown University, Medical Centre, Washington, believes digital storytelling in medical education has the potential to “link the social, environmental, and historical issues that influence health and illness through graphics”. “What emerges,” she writes, “are voices from the community that bear witness to issues that influence health including problems related to the environment, housing, public safety violence, inequities ..”

The voices represented in this issue of IJCAIP speak about progressive approaches to learning that have the potential to offer hope and change in education and in healthcare practice. There may yet be questions to be answered but, given the space, there will always be stories to tell and those who will witness, learn and be transformed.

Thanks to all the physicians who joined us in this issue of IJCAIP for sharing their articles and commentaries while contributing to this lively discussion about the arts in medical education.

Issue 8 is accessible and available at the website for subscribers.
We invite you to read the full articles available and accessible from the IJCAIP home page in HTML and PDF formats. We hope you will share these stories with your friends and colleagues.


C. McLean, Publisher IJCAIP



Subscribe free to IJCAIP Journal with an email to CherylMcLean@ijcaip.com "please subscribe"

Read more about the creative arts in interdisciplinary practice in the upcoming book “Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice, Inquiries for Hope and Change” to
be published by Detselig/Temeron Press, 2010, Editor, Cheryl McLean, Associate Editor, Robert Kelly.



________________________

1.About the Program, Stanford School of Medicine, Arts, Humanities and Medicine, http://bioethics.stanford.edu/arts/

2. Dalhousie University Humanities in Medicine Program http://humanities.medicine.dal.ca/

3. Arts in Humanities in Health and Medicine Program, University of Alberta, http://www.med.ualberta.ca/education/AHHM/index.cfm

4. The Program in Narrative Medicine, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University,

People/Leadership/ Rita Charon MD, Ph.D. http://www.narrativemedicine.org/about/people.html

5. Frank, Arthur, “The Wounded Storyteller, Body, Illness and Ethics”, University of Chicago Press,

1995, (pg. 21, Chapter l)

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Collaborative Meeting Around Transformative Potential of Arts Based Health Research

I look forward to a meeting early next week with over 60 professionals, scientists, health researchers, educators and artists at The University of Toronto, people connected to a new collaborative project that has the potential to open the way for innovative and transformative arts based health research in Canada and internationally. It's encouraging to witness the potential for real change in the making as scientists, researchers and artists join together meeting at the same table to discuss how each might contribute to the creative methods and solutions that could profoundly shift the ways we experience, express and understand health research. I'm glad to have an opportunity to participate and to represent IJCAIP The International Journal of The Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice at the workshop. And I look forward to connecting with others with common interests around the creative arts in research and practice for hope and change.



C. McLean, Publisher IJCAIP, International Journal of the Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice
Editor, "Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice, Inquiries for Hope and Change"

Friday, October 9, 2009

Arts Informed Research and Community Based Research

Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice,
Contributor Features

"Arts may be used in various stages of the research process in a variety of ways for envisioning exercises during the planning phase, to generate knowledge through data collection or analysis or to disseminate research results. The method allows those directly affected by the issue to document and express their concerns and their worldviews effectively."

Isumi Sakamoto, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Social Work, University of Toronto.
Professor Izumi Sakamoto is a former Fulbright Scholar, a Michigan Society of Fellows Associate Fellow, and a “Community of Scholars” Fellow of the Institute of Research on Women and Gender at the University of Michigan. Dr. Sakamoto’s training and practice span North America and Japan, and she brings interdisciplinary perspectives from social work, social psychology, cultural psychology, and women’s studies.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Digital Story Facilitates Reflective Process Among Future Physicians

Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice,
Contributor Features

"The purpose of incorporating digital storytelling in medical education at Georgetown University (Washington DC) is to facilitate a reflective process among future physicians. This process is based on active listening, personal commitment and building physician-patient trust which is essential in providing quality care. Through eliciting stories that relate to personal health, patients are engaged as educators who contribute to the students comprehensive understanding of interrelated determinants of health. By promoting patients' participation in their own health affairs, physicians are ultimately able to provide better and more lasting care."
Kim Bullock, MD


Kim Bullock, MD is a family medicine and emergency room physician as well as Community Health Division Director and Associate Professor, Department of Family Medicine, Georgetown University Medical Centre. She has infused social learning theory and reflective patient and community centred practice into her classroom and clinical teaching. Dr. Bullock also serves as Director of The Community Health Division and Assistant Director of Service Learning where she has strengthened community partnerships within pre-clinical medical education and used digital stories to expand student participation and engagement in diverse local communities.

Look for commentary by Kim Bullock in October issue The International Journal of The Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice IJCAIP.