Impacts of a gross anatomy laboratory course on medical students’ emotional reactions in Taiwan: the role of high-level emotions

Abstract Background Gross anatomy laboratory course at medical school is usually an important learning subject for medical students; however, seeing a cadaver often makes them feel uncomfortable. According to the broaden-and-build theory, positive emotions broaden our inventory of thoughts and actio...

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Main Authors: Ruei-Jen Chiou, Po-Fang Tsai, Der-Yan Han
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02923-1
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spelling doaj-69b2a8ad5abe430f99cc4447d95bbec12021-09-19T11:57:57ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202021-09-0121111310.1186/s12909-021-02923-1Impacts of a gross anatomy laboratory course on medical students’ emotional reactions in Taiwan: the role of high-level emotionsRuei-Jen Chiou0Po-Fang Tsai1Der-Yan Han2Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, School of Medicine, College of Medicine, Taipei Medical UniversityGraduate Institute of Humanities in Medicine, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Taipei Medical UniversitySection of Liberal Arts, Center for General Education, Taipei Medical UniversityAbstract Background Gross anatomy laboratory course at medical school is usually an important learning subject for medical students; however, seeing a cadaver often makes them feel uncomfortable. According to the broaden-and-build theory, positive emotions broaden our inventory of thoughts and actions, and build physical, mental, and social resources. Research on positive psychology found that through direct thanks and positive reframing, people who feel gratitude show fewer depressive symptoms. The present study tried to reduce students’ negative emotions towards cadavers by sequential activities, such as family interviews and an initiation ceremony, which induced gratitude and other positive emotions. Methods The Emotional Reactions Towards Cadavers Scale (ERTCS) was used to evaluate medical students’ emotional reactions after they see a cadaver. Third year medical students (n = 105) at Taipei Medical University in northern Taiwan completed ERTCS on three occasions within a single semester during academic year 2016. Repeated-measures ANOVA and hierarchical regression analyses were then conducted to identify any changes in the emotional reactions of these students. Results The ERTCS showed satisfactory internal consistency and a three-factor structure, i.e., negative emotions, high-level emotions, and excited emotions. High-level emotions were the highest, and negative emotions were the lowest among the three in our sample. Three-wave data showed that participants’ high-level emotions increased, negative emotions decreased, and the former simultaneously predicted the latter after controlling for the influence of gender, religious beliefs, experience of the death of a family member or friend, and burnout level. Conclusions While past research usually focused on coping strategies to reduce medical students’ negative emotions, our study supported the broaden-and-build theory, which emphasizes positive emotions, and demonstrated that elevating medical students’ gratitude to ‘silent mentors’ is an effective way. It is suggested that combining dissection courses with medical humanities can help students successfully handle negative emotions during a gross anatomy laboratory course.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02923-1Death anxietyHigh-level emotionCeremonySilent mentorGross anatomy education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ruei-Jen Chiou
Po-Fang Tsai
Der-Yan Han
spellingShingle Ruei-Jen Chiou
Po-Fang Tsai
Der-Yan Han
Impacts of a gross anatomy laboratory course on medical students’ emotional reactions in Taiwan: the role of high-level emotions
BMC Medical Education
Death anxiety
High-level emotion
Ceremony
Silent mentor
Gross anatomy education
author_facet Ruei-Jen Chiou
Po-Fang Tsai
Der-Yan Han
author_sort Ruei-Jen Chiou
title Impacts of a gross anatomy laboratory course on medical students’ emotional reactions in Taiwan: the role of high-level emotions
title_short Impacts of a gross anatomy laboratory course on medical students’ emotional reactions in Taiwan: the role of high-level emotions
title_full Impacts of a gross anatomy laboratory course on medical students’ emotional reactions in Taiwan: the role of high-level emotions
title_fullStr Impacts of a gross anatomy laboratory course on medical students’ emotional reactions in Taiwan: the role of high-level emotions
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of a gross anatomy laboratory course on medical students’ emotional reactions in Taiwan: the role of high-level emotions
title_sort impacts of a gross anatomy laboratory course on medical students’ emotional reactions in taiwan: the role of high-level emotions
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background Gross anatomy laboratory course at medical school is usually an important learning subject for medical students; however, seeing a cadaver often makes them feel uncomfortable. According to the broaden-and-build theory, positive emotions broaden our inventory of thoughts and actions, and build physical, mental, and social resources. Research on positive psychology found that through direct thanks and positive reframing, people who feel gratitude show fewer depressive symptoms. The present study tried to reduce students’ negative emotions towards cadavers by sequential activities, such as family interviews and an initiation ceremony, which induced gratitude and other positive emotions. Methods The Emotional Reactions Towards Cadavers Scale (ERTCS) was used to evaluate medical students’ emotional reactions after they see a cadaver. Third year medical students (n = 105) at Taipei Medical University in northern Taiwan completed ERTCS on three occasions within a single semester during academic year 2016. Repeated-measures ANOVA and hierarchical regression analyses were then conducted to identify any changes in the emotional reactions of these students. Results The ERTCS showed satisfactory internal consistency and a three-factor structure, i.e., negative emotions, high-level emotions, and excited emotions. High-level emotions were the highest, and negative emotions were the lowest among the three in our sample. Three-wave data showed that participants’ high-level emotions increased, negative emotions decreased, and the former simultaneously predicted the latter after controlling for the influence of gender, religious beliefs, experience of the death of a family member or friend, and burnout level. Conclusions While past research usually focused on coping strategies to reduce medical students’ negative emotions, our study supported the broaden-and-build theory, which emphasizes positive emotions, and demonstrated that elevating medical students’ gratitude to ‘silent mentors’ is an effective way. It is suggested that combining dissection courses with medical humanities can help students successfully handle negative emotions during a gross anatomy laboratory course.
topic Death anxiety
High-level emotion
Ceremony
Silent mentor
Gross anatomy education
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02923-1
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