Requiring the Healer's Art Curriculum to Promote Professional Identity Formation Among Medical Students

J Med Humanit. 2020 Dec;41(4):531-541. doi: 10.1007/s10912-020-09649-z.

Abstract

The Healer's Art curriculum (HART) is one of the best-known educational strategies to support medical student professional identity formation. HART has been widely used as an elective curriculum. We evaluated students' experience with HART when the curriculum was required. All one hundred eleven members of the class of 2019 University of New Mexico School of Medicine students were required to enroll in HART. We surveyed the students before and after the course to assess its self-reported impact on key elements of professional identity formation such as empathy towards patients and peers, commitment to service, and burnout. A majority of students (n=53 of 92, 57.6%) reported positive effects of the course on their empathy towards other students. This finding was significantly associated with self-reported willingness to have elected the course had it not been required. One-half of respondents (n=46 of 92, 50.0%) reported positive effects on their empathy towards future patients. At least one-quarter to one-third of respondents reported positive influences on commitment to service, conceptions about being a physician, and self-perceived burnout. Students report benefits on their professional identity formation after participating in a required course on humanism. Empathy-building among peers is one valuable outcome of such curricula.

Keywords: Curriculum development; Medical education; Medical humanities; Professional identity; Professional wellness.

MeSH terms

  • Curriculum
  • Education, Medical, Undergraduate*
  • Empathy
  • Humanism
  • Humans
  • Mexico
  • Students, Medical*