Background: Arts-and-humanities-based interventions are commonly implemented in medical education to promote well-being and mitigate the risk of burnout. However, mechanisms for achieving these effects remain uncertain within graduate medical education. The emerging field of the positive humanities offers a lens to examine whether and how arts-based interventions support well-being in internal medicine interns.

Aim: Through program evaluation of this visual art workshop, we used a positive humanities framework to elucidate potential mechanisms by which arts-based curricula support well-being in internal medicine interns.

Setting: We launched the re-FRAME workshop at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in winter 2020.

Participants: Fifty-six PGY-1 trainees from one internal medicine residency program.

Program Description: The 3-h re-FRAME workshop consisted of an introductory session on emotional processing followed by two previously described arts-based interventions.

Program Evaluation: Participants completed an immediate post-workshop survey (91% response rate) assessing attitudes towards the session. Analysis of open-ended survey data demonstrated 4 categories for supporting well-being among participants: becoming emotionally aware/expressive through art, pausing for reflection, practicing nonjudgmental observation, and normalizing experiences through socialization.

Discussion: Our project substantiated proposed mechanisms from the positive humanities for supporting well-being-including reflectiveness, skill acquisition, socialization, and expressiveness-among medical interns.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10651601PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-023-08292-3DOI Listing

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