Death education in medical school: A seminar on terminal illness
- 1 December 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Death Education
- Vol. 5 (4) , 363-389
- https://doi.org/10.1080/07481188208252108
Abstract
A seminar on terminal illness was developed by the faculty of the University of Washington School of Medicine and by health care professionals within the Seattle community. A variety of teaching strategies and learning resources was employed to accommodate the large class size (180 second-year medical students). Topics reviewed included personal attitudes toward death, patient and family reactions to dying, role of the physician, role of the clergy, children and death, medical ethics in terminal illness, aging and death, grief and mourning, symptom management, and new directions in the interdisciplinary care of terminal illness. Immediate evaluation by both students and faculty was excellent. Longer follow-up evaluation (at graduation) confirms the seminar's utility but also reveals the relatively limited contact with terminal illness experienced by most medical students.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Experiment in Death Education in the Medical Curriculum: Medical Students and Clergy “on Call” TogetherOMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying, 1981
- Death Education and Physicians' Attitudes toward Dying PatientsOMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying, 1981
- Teaching about Dying and Death in a Multidisciplinary Student GroupOMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying, 1980