Self-care perspective taking and empathy in a student-faculty book club in the United States
Purpose We aimed to study the impact of a combined faculty-student book club on education and medical practice as a part of the informal curriculum at the University of Florida College of Medicine in the United States. Methods Sixteen medical students and 7 faculties who participated in the book clu...
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Korea Health Insurance Licensing Examination Institute
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doaj-3f17d49c8e964c1391b21a8676fafec92021-01-19T23:44:14ZengKorea Health Insurance Licensing Examination InstituteJournal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions1975-59372020-07-011710.3352/jeehp.2020.17.22370Self-care perspective taking and empathy in a student-faculty book club in the United StatesRebecca Henderson0Melanie Gross Hagen1Zareen Zaidi2Valentina Dunder3Edlira Maska4Ying Nagoshi5University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, USADivision of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, USADivision of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, USAUniversity of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USADivision of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, USADivision of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, USAPurpose We aimed to study the impact of a combined faculty-student book club on education and medical practice as a part of the informal curriculum at the University of Florida College of Medicine in the United States. Methods Sixteen medical students and 7 faculties who participated in the book club were interviewed through phone and recorded. The interview was then transcribed and entered into the qualitative data analysis program QSR NVivo (QSR International, Burlington, MA, USA). The transcripts were reviewed, and thematic codes were developed inductively through collaborative iteration. Based on these preliminary codes, a coding dictionary was developed and applied to all interviews within QSR Nvivo to identify themes. Results Four main themes were identified from interviews: The first theme, the importance of literature to the development and maintenance of empathy and perspective-taking, and the second theme, the importance of the book club in promoting mentorship, personal relationships and professional development, were important to both student and faculty participants. The third and fourth themes, the need for the book club as a tool for self-care and the book club serving as a reminder about the world outside of school were discussed by student book club members. Conclusion Our study demonstrated that an informal book club has a significant positive impact on self-care, perspective-taking, empathy, and developing a “world outside of school” for medical school students and faculty in the United States. It also helps to foster meaningful relationships between students and faculty.http://www.jeehp.org/upload/jeehp-17-22.pdfmedical educationmedical/health humanitiesperspective-takingburnoutempathyself careunited states |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Rebecca Henderson Melanie Gross Hagen Zareen Zaidi Valentina Dunder Edlira Maska Ying Nagoshi |
spellingShingle |
Rebecca Henderson Melanie Gross Hagen Zareen Zaidi Valentina Dunder Edlira Maska Ying Nagoshi Self-care perspective taking and empathy in a student-faculty book club in the United States Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions medical education medical/health humanities perspective-taking burnout empathy self care united states |
author_facet |
Rebecca Henderson Melanie Gross Hagen Zareen Zaidi Valentina Dunder Edlira Maska Ying Nagoshi |
author_sort |
Rebecca Henderson |
title |
Self-care perspective taking and empathy in a student-faculty book club in the United States |
title_short |
Self-care perspective taking and empathy in a student-faculty book club in the United States |
title_full |
Self-care perspective taking and empathy in a student-faculty book club in the United States |
title_fullStr |
Self-care perspective taking and empathy in a student-faculty book club in the United States |
title_full_unstemmed |
Self-care perspective taking and empathy in a student-faculty book club in the United States |
title_sort |
self-care perspective taking and empathy in a student-faculty book club in the united states |
publisher |
Korea Health Insurance Licensing Examination Institute |
series |
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions |
issn |
1975-5937 |
publishDate |
2020-07-01 |
description |
Purpose We aimed to study the impact of a combined faculty-student book club on education and medical practice as a part of the informal curriculum at the University of Florida College of Medicine in the United States. Methods Sixteen medical students and 7 faculties who participated in the book club were interviewed through phone and recorded. The interview was then transcribed and entered into the qualitative data analysis program QSR NVivo (QSR International, Burlington, MA, USA). The transcripts were reviewed, and thematic codes were developed inductively through collaborative iteration. Based on these preliminary codes, a coding dictionary was developed and applied to all interviews within QSR Nvivo to identify themes. Results Four main themes were identified from interviews: The first theme, the importance of literature to the development and maintenance of empathy and perspective-taking, and the second theme, the importance of the book club in promoting mentorship, personal relationships and professional development, were important to both student and faculty participants. The third and fourth themes, the need for the book club as a tool for self-care and the book club serving as a reminder about the world outside of school were discussed by student book club members. Conclusion Our study demonstrated that an informal book club has a significant positive impact on self-care, perspective-taking, empathy, and developing a “world outside of school” for medical school students and faculty in the United States. It also helps to foster meaningful relationships between students and faculty. |
topic |
medical education medical/health humanities perspective-taking burnout empathy self care united states |
url |
http://www.jeehp.org/upload/jeehp-17-22.pdf |
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