Orienting to Medicine: Scripting Professionalism, Hierarchy, and Social Difference at the Start of Medical School

Nascent medical students’ first view into medical school orients them toward what is considered important in medicine. Based on ethnography conducted over 18 months at a New England medical school, this article explores themes which emerged during a first-year student orientation and examines how th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Culture, medicine and psychiatry medicine and psychiatry, 2018-09, Vol.42 (3), p.654-683
Hauptverfasser: Craig, Sienna R., Scott, Rebekah, Blackwood, Kristy
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container_title Culture, medicine and psychiatry
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creator Craig, Sienna R.
Scott, Rebekah
Blackwood, Kristy
description Nascent medical students’ first view into medical school orients them toward what is considered important in medicine. Based on ethnography conducted over 18 months at a New England medical school, this article explores themes which emerged during a first-year student orientation and examines how these scripts resurface across a four-year curriculum, revealing dynamics of enculturation into an institution and the broader profession. We analyze orientation activities as discursive and embodied fields which serve “practical” purposes of making new social geographies familiar, but which also frame institutional values surrounding “soft” aspects of medicine: professionalism; dynamics of hierarchy and vulnerability; and social difference. By examining orientation and connecting these insights to later, discerning educational moments, we argue that orientation reveals tensions between the overt and hidden curricula within medical education, including what being a good doctor means. Our findings are based on data from semi-structured interviews, focus groups, and participant-observation in didactic and clinical settings. This article answers calls within medical anthropology and medical education literature to recognize implicit values at play in producing physicians, unearthing ethnographically how these values are learned longitudinally via persisting gaps between formal and hidden curricula. Assumptions hidden in plain sight call for ongoing medical education reform.
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source Sociological Abstracts; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Anthropology
Clinical Psychology
Curricula
Education policy
Education reform
Enculturation
Ethnography
Health education
Hierarchies
Human geography
Medical anthropology
Medical education
Medical schools
Medical students
Medicine
Original Paper
Physicians
Professional education
Professionalism
Psychiatry
Public Health
Scripts
Social dynamics
Social Sciences
Sociology
Values
Vulnerability
title Orienting to Medicine: Scripting Professionalism, Hierarchy, and Social Difference at the Start of Medical School
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