Abstract
The Vulnerability in Medicine (ViM) program was developed to provide protected time and psychologically safe spaces for third-year medical students to consider challenges in the doctor-patient relationship and the clinical workplace. A suite of discussion-prompts presented in a small-group learning environment provides a springboard for students to reflect on their development as clinicians, understand the personhood of their patients, explore the therapeutic relationship, and consider emotional responses and personal, cultural, and social assumptions that impact on care. The program supports students to recognise vulnerability in themselves, the patient, their tutors, and the wider clinical team, as they face the challenge of aligning the clinician they want to become with ideals of professionalism and the imperfect clinical workplace. This 6‑week program focuses on the vulnerability of patients, students, and doctors in a weekly tutorial interposed with clinical placements primarily in geriatric, rehabilitation, or palliative medicine. The tutorials draw from the medical humanities and use experiential, reflective, and narrative learning techniques. They are facilitated by generalist clinicians who model their own vulnerability, humanity, and reflective practice by sharing tutorial tasks equally with students. Students report feeling supported, and appreciate the opportunity to discuss ethical, psychosocial, and emotional aspects of medicine whilst reflecting on what medical practice means to them. Tutors experience a deeper appreciation of student journeys and their own vocations as clinicians and teachers. The sharing of vulnerability exposes the humanity of patients, students, and clinicians, and sustains our whole-person approach to the care of patients, students, and ourselves.
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Background
To flourish as future professionals, medical students need protected time and safe spaces to reflect on, and discuss, their experiences [1,2,3]. Swept into the vortex of crowded curricula and high-stakes assessments, they have little time to contemplate themselves, their patients, doctor-patient relationships, or the distressing, moving, or even transcendent experiences of the imperfect clinical workplace [1,2,3].
Several programs have been developed to provide such spaces, tailored to local needs and available resources. These include: Schwartz Rounds for Medical Students [4], focusing on social and emotional aspects of healthcare; the Healer’s Art program [5, 6], focusing on values, experiences, meaning, collegial support, and healing relationships; and Mindful Medical Practice[7] focusing on awareness of self, context, and the patient as a whole person. Such programs foster transformative learning though emotional engagement, embracing multiple viewpoints, and supporting reflective practice and professional identity formation[8]. Most engage with the medical humanities and promote student self-care strategies to reduce rates of anxiety, depression, and burnout in medical professionals and students[9].
We describe below our own approach, which also draws inspiration from whole-person care [10, 11], reflective practice [13], Balint groups [12, 14,15,16] compassion-cultivation training [17], and narrative medicine [18, 19].
Since 2019, six experienced generalist clinician-tutors have facilitated a weekly tutorial program to 328 students undertaking 6‑week clinical placements in geriatric medicine, palliative care, rehabilitation medicine, or refugee health. These Vulnerability in Medicine (ViM) tutorials are carefully nurtured safe spaces for students to venture courageously outside the biomedical, into the humanities and creative arts. We aim to deepen student understanding of patient experiences and the doctor-patient dynamic, as they engage in reflective practice. Novel aspects of our program include its inclusion as a course requirement, its weekly schedule throughout a clinical placement, the allocation of tutorial tasks to both students and tutors creating a culture of shared leadership, the deliberate flattening of the teacher-student power differential, the focus on ethical dilemmas in the clinical learning environment, and the use of creative enquiry and expression [20].
Program design
The 2‑hour tutorials are a compulsory course component. Students are encouraged to debrief about challenges or concerns from the clinical environment and are rostered to one or more tasks each week (see Tab. 1). All tasks have been designed and refined iteratively through student and tutor feedback and each is modelled by the tutor in the first tutorial. The first task is choosing an opening reflection or meditation. Other tasks include leading discussions on a ‘question-of-the-week’, an excerpt of medical literature, and an ethical dilemma collated by the course coordinator. The only graded tutorial task is the Understanding the Person Discussion, in which students, following the example of their tutors, present an in-depth ‘whole-person’ interview with a patient about their childhood, family, working life, important life events, experiences of healthcare, the impact of illness on their life, thoughts about their future, and what brings them meaning. Students share their personal response to the patient’s narrative, while encouraging curious questions from the group about the person and their therapeutic relationships. The final tutorial task is the sharing of a piece from the humanities or creative arts chosen for its personally meaningful connection to the theme of vulnerability. During the 6 weeks, students and tutors are encouraged to practice self-care, to reflect on their lived experience as students and clinicians, and to re-engage with enriching or restorative creative activities, hobbies, or interests they may have set aside due to study or work. In the final tutorial, additional time is provided for everyone to share a personal creative contribution.
Impact on student learning and experience
Ethics approval was obtained for an evaluation of this program; the project complies with the provisions contained in the National Statement on Ethical Conduct in Human Research and with the regulations governing experimentation on humans (The University of Queensland Institutional Human Research Ethics Approval Number: 2019000169). Most students surveyed indicated overall satisfaction with the program (86% of students were very satisfied/satisfied, 10% neutral and 4% dissatisfied/very dissatisfied, response rate 169/190, 88.9%). Free text responses indicated four themes: a road less travelled; openness and candour; self-care and being cared for; and connection and collegiality.
The road less travelled
Students acknowledged the cognitive shift from a biomedical focus to a ‘whole-person’ approach embracing the psychosocial domain. A small number of students reported preferring a biomedical emphasis, in contrast to most students who welcomed the shift:
I like that it is a breath of fresh air discussing the biopsychosocial model of medicine and not just the medical part. I enjoy the ethical discussions, the wide variety of ideas from my peers, and I enjoy that it is a non-judgemental space (2019, student 54).
Openness and candour
Many students appreciated the safe and non-judgemental space to acknowledge challenges and powerful emotions in the face of patient suffering, and the support to respond compassionately and curiously. Some students reported initially struggling to share their thoughts and feelings but developing confidence as the program continued. Students witnessed patient struggles and challenges, with some students observing their first patient death. Most listened to narratives of trauma, loss, and sadness, using tutorials to explore or ‘sort through’ their feelings. Discussion topics also included moral distress, and concerns about workplace culture.
I loved that it gave us an outlet to talk about our vulnerabilities, stressors, and fears in a safe space. These are all the things we’re expected to just do and deal with as a doctor, but they are never talked about (2020, student 38).
Self-care and being cared for
Students expressed feelings of being cared for personally by clinicians and peers who were interested in their well-being. Students appreciated the relaxed discussions with peers and a clinician external to their clinical placement, away from the busy clinical environment. They welcomed opportunities to discuss medical student and doctor health and explore self-care strategies.
The environment … allowed time for us to mentally sort through the emotionally overwhelming experiences and derive protective mental health coping strategies (2020, student 41).
Connection and collegiality
Students enjoyed learning about their tutor’s experiences with patients, including their challenges and vulnerabilities. Tutor modelling of tutorial tasks made them seem more equal participants in the learning space.
Felt like I was on equal ground and being treated as such … encouraged everyone to be more open about their own experiences in a comfortable way (2019, student 8).
By having tutors have an active role it was helpful in comparing my level of reflection and effort to what can be potentially reached (2019, student 15).
Students appreciated learning that other students were experiencing similar challenges and reported a deeper and more meaningful sense of collegiality.
Being able to hear and discuss with other students about their experiences … helped me to reflect more deeply on my own … helped me feel less alone (2020, student 13).
Creative-reflective contributions
Students and tutors accepted the challenge to re-engage in creative interests and hobbies, and express what vulnerability in medicine means personally. A few students initially found the prospect of developing a creative-reflective contribution daunting but with the support of their tutor and group stepped out of their comfort zone and embraced the challenge. The contributions of students and tutors provided a rich, diverse, and astonishing insight into their humanity and wisdom, which was celebrated in each group. These expressions ranged from poetry, drawing, painting, craftwork, cooking, musical and dramatic performance, to the development of short computer games and digital animations (for an example, see Fig. 1).
[The tutorials] reminded me of the other aspects that make up me … those tucked-away creative parts of me which I realised I had been living without (2020, student 14).
Impact on clinician-tutors
Tutors participated in regular debriefing sessions and an audio-recorded focus-group discussion. Some tutors were cautious about aspects of the new program:
I was definitely aware of entering an unfamiliar territory. You know, I’ve given a number of different tutorials over the years, but this was something different (Tutor 1).
Several tutors reported higher levels of student respect and engagement than anticipated, and feelings of warmth towards their students:
I’ve been touched by how poignant and thoughtful the students have been in response to the process (Tutor 2).
I feel like it’s required much less selling from me … than I’d anticipated (Tutor 3).
Tutors enjoyed building student confidence in venturing outside their comfort zones. Sharing their own vulnerability in the first tutorial ‘broke the ice’ and the explicit tutorial structure and rostering of tutorial tasks fostered a particularly safe, compassionate, and caring space:
They can sense the privilege of this time … with people who are caring, you know, seem to be caring personally for them … you can see them almost steeling themselves towards the time in their practice when they won’t get to do this … when they become a doctor (Tutor 2).
Tutors reported deeper insights into student challenges, hope for the future of the profession, and a reinvigoration of their own clinical and teaching vocations.
Conclusion
Providing protected time to reflect on the personhood of patients, relationships and challenges in the workplace, including emotions and self-care, is restorative for both students and clinicians. Distinctive aspects of our program include its weekly schedule embedded in specific clinical placements, the semi-structured approach with rostered tasks, prompts to generate discussion, tutors undertaking the same work as students in the spirit of shared leadership, and engagement in creative enquiry. Despite some tutor speculation about whether whole-person care approaches, compassion and self-care can be sustained beyond these supportive spaces, several encounters with former students now working as junior doctors suggest the tutorials have made a positive, enduring impression. We plan to pilot a modified program to clinical teachers.
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Acknowledgements
Thank you to the medical students and clinicians who generously participate in the Vulnerability in Medicine program at The University of Queensland and help improve the program each iteration. Thank you to Emeritus Professor Mieke van Driel and the General Practice Clinical Unit for supporting the vision of the program and the School of Medicine, particularly Professors Stuart Carney and Kirsty Foster, for allowing the vision to come to fruition.
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M. Kelly, J. Lynch, P. Mainstone, A. Green and N. Sturman declare that they have no competing interests.
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Kelly, M., Lynch, J., Mainstone, P. et al. ‘Things we are expected to just do and deal with’: Using the medical humanities to encourage reflection on vulnerability and nurture clinical skills, collegiality, compassion, and self-care. Perspect Med Educ 11, 300–304 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40037-022-00724-w
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40037-022-00724-w