Academic Programs Office, Perelman School of Medicine, Jordan Medical Education Center, University of Pennsylvania, 6th Floor, Building 421 3400 Civic Center Blvd, Philadelphia, PA, 19104-5162, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2023 Sep 1;23(1):620. doi: 10.1186/s12909-023-04564-y.
There have been increasing efforts to integrate the arts and humanities into medical education, particularly during undergraduate medical education (UME). Previous studies, however, have focused on courses and curricular programming without rigorous characterization of the associated paracurricular environment or infrastructure enabling or facilitating these offerings.
To assess opportunities for students to engage the arts and humanities during their medical education as well as the institutional resources to support those opportunities, we developed the Humanities and Arts Programming Scale (HARPS): an 18-point scale involving eight sub-domains (Infrastructure, Curricular Opportunities, Extracurricular Engagement, Opportunities for Immersion, Faculty Engagement, Staff Support, Student Groups, and Scholarship). This scale was used to evaluate the top-31 ranked United States medical schools as determined by US News and World Report's (USWNR) Medical School Research Rankings using information derived from public-facing, online information.
Mean cumulative HARPS score was 11.26, with a median score of 12, a standard deviation of 4.32 and a score range of 3-17. Neither USWNR ranking nor private/public institution status were associated with the cumulative score (p = 0.121, p = 0.739). 52% of institutions surveyed had a humanities-focused center/division with more than 70% of the schools having significant (> 5) faculty engaged in the medical humanities. 65% of schools offered 10 or more paracurricular medical humanities events annually, while 68% of the institutions had more than 5 medical humanities student organizations. While elective, non-credit courses are available, only 3 schools required instruction in the arts and humanities, and comprehensive immersive experiences in the medical humanities were present in only 29% of the schools.
Although there is a significant presence of the medical humanities in UME, there is a need for integration of the arts and humanities into required UME curricula and into immersive pathways for engaging the medical humanities.
将艺术和人文学科融入医学教育的努力一直在增加,尤其是在本科医学教育(UME)期间。然而,之前的研究都集中在课程和课程规划上,而没有严格描述相关的课外环境或基础设施,这些环境或基础设施可以提供或促进这些课程。
为了评估学生在医学教育期间参与艺术和人文学科的机会,以及支持这些机会的机构资源,我们开发了人文和艺术课程规模(HARPS):一个 18 分制的量表,涉及八个子领域(基础设施、课程机会、课外参与、沉浸机会、教师参与、员工支持、学生团体和奖学金)。该量表用于评估《美国新闻与世界报道》(US News and World Report,USWNR)医学专业排名中排名前 31 的美国医学院,其排名依据是 USWNR 的医学研究排名,使用的是来自面向公众的在线信息。
HARPS 的累积平均得分为 11.26,中位数得分为 12,标准差为 4.32,得分范围为 3-17。USWNR 的排名和私立/公立机构的地位都与累积分数无关(p=0.121,p=0.739)。接受调查的机构中有 52%有一个以人文科学为重点的中心/部门,超过 70%的学校有 10 名以上从事医学人文科学的教师。65%的学校每年提供 10 次或更多次课外医学人文学科活动,而 68%的学校有 6 个以上医学人文学科学生组织。虽然有选修的非学分课程,但只有 3 所学校要求艺术和人文学科的教学,只有 29%的学校提供全面的医学人文学科沉浸式体验。
尽管 UME 中存在大量的医学人文学科,但仍需要将艺术和人文学科纳入 UME 课程的必修课程,并纳入医学人文学科的沉浸式学习途径。