Erik Larsen, Christopher Mooney, Natercia Rodrigues, Margie Hodges Shaw
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This study investigates sources of distress experienced by some medical students performing cadaveric dissection in the anatomy lab. Using a novel theoretical framework adapted from the humanities, faculty at the University of Rochester sought to understand the connection between distress, dissection, and the ontological assumptions students hold about cadavers. Between 2019 and 2021, the authors engaged in an iterative inductive thematic analysis to better understand student experiences. We conducted 14 semi-structured individual interviews with medical students about their experiences. We found that students' experiences of distress were closely related to confusion surrounding the cadaver's ontological status. Our study contributes to understanding this connection in three significant ways: (1) our findings bolster the existing literature linking distress to the ontological ambiguity surrounding the cadaver-an ambiguity related to the ontological status of persons in Western societies; (2) we share a conceptual framework, derived from Roberto Esposito's work on persons and things in Western history, to better understand distress in the anatomy laboratory and to facilitate development of healthy coping strategies for morally complicated situations in patient care; and (3) applying our framework, we demonstrate how dissection challenges norms fundamental to our moral understanding, and consider how it may create experiences of moral distress for some students.
本研究调查了一些医学生在解剖实验室进行尸体解剖时所经历的痛苦来源。罗彻斯特大学(University of Rochester)的教师们采用了一种改编自人文学科的新颖理论框架,试图理解痛苦、解剖和学生们对尸体的本体论假设之间的联系。在2019年至2021年期间,作者进行了反复的归纳主题分析,以更好地了解学生的经历。我们对医学生进行了14次半结构化的个人访谈,了解他们的经历。我们发现学生的痛苦经历与围绕尸体本体地位的困惑密切相关。我们的研究在三个重要方面有助于理解这种联系:(1)我们的发现支持了现有文献将痛苦与围绕尸体的本体论模糊性联系起来——这种模糊性与西方社会中人的本体论地位有关;(2)我们分享了一个源自Roberto Esposito关于西方历史上的人与事的概念框架,以更好地理解解剖实验室中的痛苦,并促进在病人护理中道德复杂情况下健康应对策略的发展;(3)应用我们的框架,我们展示了解剖如何挑战我们道德理解的基本规范,并考虑它如何给一些学生带来道德痛苦的经历。
期刊介绍:
Advances in Health Sciences Education is a forum for scholarly and state-of-the art research into all aspects of health sciences education. It will publish empirical studies as well as discussions of theoretical issues and practical implications. The primary focus of the Journal is linking theory to practice, thus priority will be given to papers that have a sound theoretical basis and strong methodology.