Vol. 23 No. 1 (2023)
Original articles

Le Medical Humanities per la formazione degli studenti di Medicina. Le arti visive per lo sviluppo di skills.

Vincenza Ferrara
Sapienza University of Rome
Alessandro Franceschini
SIPeM Italian Society for Medical Pedagogy
Giuseppe Di Natale
University of L' Aquila
Silvio Romano
University of L' Aquila
Leila Fabiani
University of L' Aquila

Published 2023-12-11

Keywords

  • medical education, visual thinking strategies, healthcare training, medical humanities, visual art

Abstract

Introduction

Medical Humanities have been introduced in the field of medical and health education for some years to encourage the development of skills, improve the relationship with the patient and to limit stress. Even  the University of L'Aquila, with a project started in 2020, has introduced some training modules using the visual arts and in particular the method of Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS). The master's degree course in Medicine and Surgery was involved, as well as that of Cultural Heritage.

Methods

The VTS module was delivered as an Optional Educational Activity (AFO) through four laboratory meetings of 90 minutes each and introduced by some Lessons on Art and Medicine. Pre and post tests were administered, using a validated grid, to evaluate the impact of the methodology on the development of skills.

Results

All participating students increased their score from pre to post test, demonstrating the improvement of observation skills, problem solving, critical thinking, linguistic expression. The same test was administered to a control cohort whose results were not as positive, demonstrating that students who did not attend such activities in the same period did not develop the useful skills.

Conclusions

The introduction of these activities and, in particular, the Visual Thinking Strategies has demonstrated that the arts-based learning activities represent an effective methodology to increase the professional skills of students in the medical and healthcare area, therefore they should be added to the curricula.