Friday, April 9, 2021

Photography and Medical Humanities

From the 4/9/2021 newsletter


Perspective/Opinion


Photography and Medical Humanities


Carlyle Chan, MD



Dr. Chan served on the AAMC Arts and Humanities Integration Committee that drafted the FRAHME (Fundamental Role of Arts and Humanities in Medical Education) report. He shares how a deeper dive into the humanities, and photography in particular, can teach physicians to be better observers and help “defy acceleration” in their lives …


“The arts teach creative means of expression, understanding of different perspectives, an awareness of knowledge and emotions throughout the human experience, and the sharing of perceptions through artistic creation and practices in the expressive world.”

“The humanities teach close reading practices as an essential tool, an appreciation for context across time and space, qualitative analysis of social structures and relationships, the importance of perspective, the capacity for empathic understanding analysis of the structure of an argument…”

-NASEM 2018


Similar to the NASEM (National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine) report, the object of the AAMC FRAHME (Fundamental Role of Arts and Humanities in Medical Education) initiative was to “improve the education, practice, and well-being of physicians through deeper integrative experiences with the arts and humanities.”

Photography is a visual art that consists of many sub-categories including, but not limited to, landscape, fine art, portrait, street, food, and photojournalism.  Like other visual arts a photograph can evoke very different personal responses from each individual viewing an image.  Photographer Minor White utilizes the term Equivalence to describe this response.   In psychiatry, we might describe this as a form of transference.  That is, we bring our past experiences into our present-day life.  

For the photographer, photographs have a magical element.  In a fleeting moment, a person can preserve a scene in perpetuity.  As the saying goes, “Take a picture.  It lasts longer.”  However, the camera is not as sensitive as the human eye.  With the exception of photojournalism, adjusting an image after capturing one (a.k.a. postproduction) allows the photographer the creative freedom to better represent what was seen in the mind’s eye.  This is not unlike a painter who may add clouds and move objects to improve a scene’s composition.  Both these activities, picture taking and postproduction, are creative processes.  The former requires, among other skills, powers of observation, perspective taking, composition, and appreciation of lighting.  The latter includes the same skill sets plus technical ones to help develop the final product.  

It has been said that one way to relieve stress is to find an activity that defies acceleration.  Taking and processing photos does slow down the pace of life.  One views and studies the scene to be captured and similarly views and studies the image to be rendered.  Engaging in photography not only provides a diversion from the demands of clinical practice and a respite from life pressures, but also an outlet for creative endeavors.  Photographs are another vehicle for implementing Visual Thinking Strategies while helping avoid burnout.  Parenthetically, the best camera to have is the one you have with you, be it a professional grade SLR or one on a smartphone.  Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, photography is fun.



Carlyle Chan, MD, is Professor and Vice Chair for Professional Development and Educational Outreach in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine at MCW. 


“Yes, and…”: How Improv Techniques Enhance Medical Training

From the 4/9/2021 newsletter


Medical Humanities Perspective/Opinion


“Yes, and…”: How Improv Techniques Enhance Medical Training


Erica Chou, MD and Sara Lauck, MD



Drs. Chou and Lauck discuss the parallels between interpersonal interactions in theater improv and at the bedside. Improv offers a way to hone critical clinical skills …


Attunement, affirmation, and advancement. These are the core skills of improv, and of all interpersonal interactions. Attunement means to be present and focused, deeply listening. Affirmation is to acknowledge the other person's truth and to find common ground, even at times of disagreement. Advancement uses that common ground to move the conversation and interaction forward. In short, these skills embody the “yes, and” tenant of improv. 

These same skills are essential in the practice of medicine. Good communication with patients, families and healthcare team members requires active listening and adaptability. A quality of empathy is recognizing others’ perspectives as their truths. Listening, acknowledging, and responding productively are the foundation of creating psychological safety on a team. The relevancy and applicability of improv in healthcare is where medical improv comes into play. 


Here’s an example of Medical Improv

Medical improv is the adaptation of theater improv skills and principles to the healthcare setting. It is a type of experiential learning, where learners participate in improv exercises and then debrief afterwards. While the exercises themselves teach learners to be spontaneous and think on their feet, it is the unpacking of their actions, behaviors and feelings during the exercises that allows learners to reflect and make connections to medicine and other aspects of their lives. 

An example is an exercise called Word at a Time Story. In this exercise five to six people stand in a line. They are given the title of a story and asked to make up a story together where each person says one word at a time. This exercise is incredibly challenging. The natural tendency is for everyone to think of their own story and to try to plan what word they are going to say when it is their turn. But then the sentences that are created make no sense grammatically and the story does not come together. To be successful with this exercise, participants need to focus, be present and listen intently; and if they do these things, then they can trust that when it is their turn to speak, they will say a word that aligns and advances the story.  


How does this relate to medicine?

These same skills can be applied when obtaining a patient history. Rather than approaching the patient encounter with a list of pre-prepared questions to ask, students learn with medical improv to listen and respond to their patients, and to embrace the path the conversation takes.

After attending the 5th International Medical Improv Train-the-Trainer Workshop in 2018, we developed a two hour-long medical improv workshop based on Katie Watson’s Playing Doctor course at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.2 Our workshop includes the above exercise, as well as several other improv exercises that explore the concept of “yes, and,” emotions, leading/following, and status. We have presented our workshop for a variety of different audiences, including high school, undergraduate and medical students, residents, faculty, staff and interprofessional teams. 

Please contact Erica Chou echou@mcw.edu or Sara Lauck slauck@mcw.edu if you are interested in having a medical improv workshop for your learners, section or team. 


For more reading

Belinda Fu (2019) Common Ground: Frameworks for Teaching Improvisational Ability in Medical Education, Teaching and Learning in Medicine, 31:3, 342- 355, DOI: 10.1080/10401334.2018.1537880 

Katie Watson (2011) Perspective: Serious Play: Teaching Medical Skills with Improvisational Theater Techniques, Academic Medicine, 86:10, 1260-1265, DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31822cf858



Erica Chou, MD is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics (Hospital Medicine) at MCW. She is a member of the Curriculum Pillar of the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Institute for the Transformation of Medical Education. 

Sara Lauck, MD is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics (Hospital Medicine) at MCW and the Pediatrics Clerkship Director.


Thursday, April 1, 2021

Building a New Curriculum for MCW

From the 4/2/2021 newsletter


Director’s Corner


Building a New Curriculum for MCW


Adina Kalet, MD MPH


Dr. Kalet focuses on how we must change our educational strategies to achieve the most important work we have as educators: To prepare medical students to become caring, character-driven physicians that can manage a rapidly expanding knowledge base in rapidly evolving health care systems …



As you will read in this week’s Transformational Times, MCW Academic Affairs has been engaged in a process of reimagining the medical school curriculum. 

This has been an almost two year-long, deliberative, and creative process. As part of the comprehensive Liaison Committee of Medical Education (LCME) self-study we do every eight years for reaccreditation, MCW launched small group curriculum conversations. Robust discussions in key stakeholder working groups were bracketed by two full-day retreats. We defined key curricular principles and outlined a new three-phase structure and its predominant instructional designs (case-based sessions, spiral weeks, etc.).  This is important work and no small task. 

I have also been told that MCW has had both successful and unsuccessful experiences with curriculum reform in the past. We are not alone in this, Yet, I have participated in a number curriculum renewal cycles in medical schools around the world. I can attest that our approach has been well managed. The process and outcomes have been inspiring and the team has embraced a road-tested model for organizational and curriculum change to guide their work. The principles and concepts are evidence-based and well understood. There is a nice balance between ancient wisdom (e.g., “learning from patients”) and newer ideas (e.g., Programmatic Assessment of Master Adaptive Learners). 


It seems as though everyone is reforming their curricula (again)

The LCME began accrediting US medical schools in 1942. Since then, most US medical schools have engaged in significant changes in their curriculum about every ten or so years. Lately, the frequency of major curricular updates has been accelerating toward   but has not yet arrived at   a robust continuous quality improvement process. 

In 2018, only 15% of US medical schools were either not planning or had recently implemented a major curriculum change. 35% were in the planning phase and 31% in the implementation phase of a major curriculum reform. The majority of the schools engaged in curriculum change were deliberately moving away from the early 20th century Flexnerian “2 + 2 model,” with two years of predominately pre-clerkship basic sciences followed by two years of immersive clinical experiences. On the whole, they were moving toward more integrated models where students spend less time in classrooms and more time learning the foundational sciences while mastering the cognitive aspects of clinical work. 


Curricula were forced to change as hospital practices changed

This is not a revolution, but more of an evolution. Change, however, has been slow in coming. Why is this? Plenty of schools have attempted the switch. There is ample evidence that students learn best in well-integrated curricula with early and rich exposure to the real-world applications (e.g. written cases, simulated cases, early actual patient experiences). Students demonstrate knowledge and skills when held to very high standards and cultivate their developing medical identities while supporting their well-being as future physicians. 


Change is hard because, traditionally, medical educators have been “curriculum agnostic.” When I was a resident, Saul J. Farber was both our the chair of the department of medicine and dean of the medical school. He was an absolute legendary bedside teacher who was fond of saying that the formal curriculum was irrelevant. He believed that the most important thing we could do as a medical school was choose the right “kids” and then engage them (he said, “throw them”) into caring for patients in our large inner city, safety net hospital. 

For his time, Dean Farber was not wrong, but he wasn’t right, either. In his era   what we often referred to tongue-in-cheek as, “the days of the giants” (he was chairman of medicine for thirty-two years, after all!)   people were hospitalized for weeks at a time while they underwent diagnosis and treatment.

This pace was slow enough that students and teachers could spend a great deal of time together with patients, eliciting their histories and conducting detailed physical exams and bedside maneuvers. The students in that generation before mine witnessed the “natural course” of disease processes, and were able to then spent hours in the hospital library, the laboratories, and reading rooms, reviewing radiological images and having midnight meals where cases were discussed in detail. Using a slow, deliberate, iterative process, their role models showed the students how to integrate all the material and choose courses of action. 

This held true for surgical specialties, as well. Patients who were to undergo an operation were routinely admitted to the hospital the afternoon prior to their procedure. This allowed enough time for them to undergo work-ups by the junior medical student, the senior medical student, the intern, and the surgical resident ahead of time. Postoperative patients stayed in the hospital for weeks prior to the development of rehabilitation centers and long-term care facilities. 

In that earlier era, many teaching hospital physicians also conducted basic science research. It was common (even into my era) that students would walk to the clinician-scientist’s lab to discuss the relevant physiology, microbiology or biochemistry and receive a quick “chalk talk” about the scientific principles underlying their patients’ condition and treatment. 

By the time I was a resident in the early 1980s, the pace of hospital work had revved up, and patients were either very acutely ill or hospitalized very briefly. Most diagnoses and therapeutics moved outside of the inpatient setting and, therefore, outside the view of most medical students. Science was conducted at a distance from the clinical environments. Fewer and fewer scientists were clinicians and fewer clinicians did science. To ensure adequate preparation for practice, medical schools were forced (they were reluctant at first) to create ambulatory care experiences for students and residents. This was only one of many major shifts in medical school curricula. 


Some new and some old elements will create a relevant curriculum for the new healthcare environment

Hospitals now run 24/7/365 and stress the constant downward pressure on “length of stay.” While hospitals are exciting, most medicine is practiced in clinics and community settings. New sciences have become critical to being a physician.  We are constantly struggling to keep our educational structure, content, process and outcomes relevant.  

At the same time, medical school curriculum requirements have become more and more structured and complex. Dean Farber would be aghast. Where are those “midnight meals”? Where is the time to learn through discussing cases and sitting with patients and families? It all seems hopelessly romantic and out of touch with modern reality. But I think we do better by holding firm to core principles and innovating. 


So, what are the non-negotiables elements as we move forward? 

We can protect the “baby” (integrative learning processes essential to becoming a physician) as we consider “spilling out the bathwater” (experiences that don’t lead to deep learning). 

First, we have to build curricula around the knowledge that a physician’s most profound and long-lasting learning occurs while thinking about and interacting with patients. Second, we must recognize and support great teachers who care about learning, are knowledgeable, remain optimistic, and know how to motivate. Third, we must set and hold everyone to measurable high standards. 

This is where Dean Farber got it right. Take excellent, motivated students and mix them up with great teachers with a range of content expertise and provide them with endless “clinical material” against which to demonstrate their growing mastery. Voila! Medical education alchemy. 


Engaging and caring for our stakeholders

Based on educational research and our desire to create new, vibrant approaches, we believe that a strong medical school curriculum will enable groups of students and faculty to learn by puzzling together through a wide range of cases. That is our goal. 

As we create the new educational environment, the students who are still in the current curriculum will need to be cared for and educated. They will be invited to engage in the planning for, and piloting of, new curricular and assessment elements. If we do this right, our students will be the main beneficiaries, yet some will likely feel and express discontent. 

Faculty will need to take new roles, learn new skills and feel like novices again. We will need to work closely with small groups of students across many content domains outside of our own content expertise. We will have more interaction and, therefore, more collaboration between scientists and clinicians. Those of us who are excellent lecturers will lecture on topics best communicated that way. The rest of us will learn new ways. This will be difficult for some. 


The bumps in the road will be smoothed out by working together

Like all medical schools, MCW is a complex organization with many missions and complex governance. We will need both design and change strategies as we anticipate and prepare for predictable challenges both within and without.

A strong leadership team and communication plans are emerging.  Creating and implementing a cutting edge, locally relevant curriculum will take significant effort, cooperation, forbearance, respectful debate, a wide range of expertise, and extraordinary program management skills. While I hope we will be doing a lot of celebrating, I also know this will we stressful. 

The Kern Institute will be there to support faculty development, administrative savvy, and complex and integrated assessment. In a few years, we will have the infrastructure in place to continually improve the curriculum so that future changes will be incremental rather than revolutionary. 

I believe we are long overdue for an upgrade and that the time is now. Even Dean Farber would likely see the wisdom in that.


Adina Kalet, MD MPH is the Director of the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Institute for the Transformation of Medical Education and holder of the Stephen and Shelagh Roell Endowed Chair at the Medical College of Wisconsin.


The news from Atlanta this week is horrifying

From the 3/19/2021 newsletter


The news from Atlanta this week is horrifying.


A gunman took the lives of eight people, six of whom were Asian women. This has been one among many recent hateful crimes that have terrorized the Asian American community. Every one of us at The Kern Institute expresses our unconditional support for this community, and we want to express our love and concern for MCW’s Asian students, trainees, faculty and staff during this acutely difficult time. We continue to invite dialogue about racism, discrimination, character, caring, compassion and medical education because we understand that it is only in bringing these discussions into the light that we might learn from one another and be a part of changing our profession and our world for the better.