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The Impact of Baccalaureate Medical Humanities on Subsequent Medical Training and Practice: A Physician-Educator’s Perspective

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Abstract

This reflective essay is an attempt to organize trends in feedback I have observed during ten years of coursework, conversations, and correspondence with former students associated with the Medical Humanities Program at Baylor University. Over the years, recurrent themes arise when speaking with alumni about whether and how their medical humanities experience intersects with their current training. I have identified five particular domains in which baccalaureate medical humanities training affects students’ subsequent healthcare professions training and practice: context and complementarity, clinical relevance, reflective practice, professional preparedness and vocational calling. I created an instrument of open-ended questions for each of these categories and posted it to social media with an invitation for alumni to respond. This informal survey was conceived as an exploratory exercise with the intent to help generate a foundation for more formal qualitative research in these five domains. In this essay, I offer my own reflections together with those of former students on the impact of baccalaureate-level medical humanities training in order to illustrate the benefits in each domain for subsequent healthcare training and practice. The need for qualitative research that explores the impact of baccalaureate medical humanities merits collaboration between multiple centers of investigation across many disciplines, and across the divide between premedical and medical educators.

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Correspondence to Lauren Barron.

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Barron, L. The Impact of Baccalaureate Medical Humanities on Subsequent Medical Training and Practice: A Physician-Educator’s Perspective. J Med Humanit 38, 473–483 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10912-017-9457-1

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