The Use of Visual Arts as a Window to Diagnosing Medical Pathologies.

AMA J Ethics

Professor and clinical ethicist at Bond University School of Medicine in Queensland, Australia, specializing in organ donation and transplant ethics, as well as in the medical humanities.

Published: August 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Observation is a crucial step in the medical process that involves more than just looking; it requires keen attention to detail.
  • Training using medical humanities, particularly visual arts like paintings and films, can enhance students' observational skills as well as teamwork, listening, and analytical thinking.
  • By developing visual literacy, future clinicians can better understand patients' physical and emotional presentations, which aids in diagnosis and blends aesthetic insight with clinical knowledge.

Article Abstract

Observation is a key step preceding diagnosis, prognostication, and treatment. Careful patient observation is a skill that is learned but rarely explicitly taught. Furthermore, proper clinical observation requires more than a glance; it requires attention to detail. In medical school, the art of learning to look can be taught using the medical humanities and especially visual arts such as paintings and film. Research shows that such training improves not only observation skills but also teamwork, listening skills, and reflective and analytical thinking. Overall, the use of visual arts in medical school curricula can build visual literacy: the capacity to identify and analyze facial features, emotions, and general bodily presentations, including contextual features such as clothing, hair, and body art. With the ability to formulate and convey a detailed "picture" of the patient, clinicians can integrate aesthetic and clinical knowledge, helping facilitate the diagnosing of medical pathologies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/journalofethics.2016.18.8.imhl1-1608DOI Listing

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