Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) S.M. Holmes , Brian Innes
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of California, Berkeley
ANO 2016
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 1
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 F720660CCDBE591462879AA2532DC540
MD5 e41b23c618d7639d8010baaf8082c1e0

Resumo

This article considers the ways in which empathy for patients and related solidarity with communities may be trained out of medical students during medical school. The article focuses especially on the pre-clinical years of medical school, those that begin with orientation and initiation events such as the White Coat Ceremony. The ethnographic data for the article come from field notes and recordings from my own medical training as well as hundreds of hours of observant participation and interviews with medical students over the past several years. Exploring the framework of language socialization, I argue that learning the verbal, textual and bodily language of medical practice contributes to the increasing experience of separation between physicians and patients. Further considering the ethnographic data, I argue that we also learn a form of empathy limited to performance that short circuits clinical care and the possibility for solidarity for health equity. The article concludes with implications for medical education and the medical social sciences and humanities.

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