Department of Anatomy, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bathinda, Punjab, 151001, India.
Department of Anatomy, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
Surg Radiol Anat. 2021 Apr;43(4):523-527. doi: 10.1007/s00276-021-02715-8. Epub 2021 Feb 25.
Due to COVID-19 pandemic, Thanks giving ceremony to cadaver was different this year in two ways: the students were partially exposed to cadaveric dissections (for 7 months) and later learned Anatomy via online classes due to lockdown (for 5 months) and secondly it was not feasible to gather for the ceremony so virtual platform was preferred. The purpose of this study was to discern the gratitude for cadaver and to recognize the importance of cadaveric dissection from the reflection of students who experienced hybrid anatomy learning amidst COVID-19.
The study was conducted on 48 first year medical students who were admitted to the college in August 2019 and were willing to participate. An online invitation was sent to students to participate in virtual thanks giving to cadaver ceremony on the last day of their anatomy class (August 2020).
Though the students partially studied gross anatomy with the aid of dissections on the cadaver; however, they expressed respect and gratitude to the silent mentor in the form of a card, poem, drawing or paragraph and shared it via google classroom platform. The students wished if they could continue their anatomy course in dissection hall as paused due to COVID-19 pandemic.
Reflection of these students may mark impact on future anatomy students who may or may not get the chance for dissections. The thanks-giving gesture will also help to bind medical science and humanity especially during the crisis of pandemic.
由于 COVID-19 大流行,今年的尸检感恩仪式在两个方面有所不同:学生们部分暴露于尸体解剖(7 个月),后来由于封锁而通过在线课程学习解剖学(5 个月);其次,由于聚集在一起进行仪式不太可行,因此选择了虚拟平台。本研究的目的是从在 COVID-19 期间经历混合解剖学学习的学生的反思中,辨别对尸体的感激之情,并认识到尸体解剖的重要性。
该研究在 2019 年 8 月入学的 48 名一年级医学生中进行,他们愿意参加。在解剖课的最后一天(2020 年 8 月),向学生发送了参加虚拟尸检感恩仪式的在线邀请。
尽管学生们部分地借助尸体上的解剖来学习大体解剖学;然而,他们以卡片、诗歌、绘画或段落的形式向无声导师表示尊重和感激,并通过谷歌课堂平台分享。学生们希望如果不是因为 COVID-19 大流行,他们可以继续在解剖室进行解剖课程。
这些学生的反思可能会对未来的解剖学学生产生影响,他们可能有机会进行解剖,也可能没有机会进行解剖。感恩的姿态也将有助于在大流行期间将医学科学与人性联系起来。