A Randomized Controlled Study of Art Observation Training to Improve Medical Student Ophthalmology Skills

Observation and description are critical to the practice of medicine, and to ophthalmology in particular. However, medical education does not provide explicit training in these areas, and medical students are often criticized for deficiencies in these skills. We sought to evaluate the effects of for...

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Published inOphthalmology (Rochester, Minn.) Vol. 125; no. 1; pp. 8 - 14
Main Authors Gurwin, Jaclyn, Revere, Karen E., Niepold, Suzannah, Bassett, Barbara, Mitchell, Rebecca, Davidson, Stephanie, DeLisser, Horace, Binenbaum, Gil
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.01.2018
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Summary:Observation and description are critical to the practice of medicine, and to ophthalmology in particular. However, medical education does not provide explicit training in these areas, and medical students are often criticized for deficiencies in these skills. We sought to evaluate the effects of formal observation training in the visual arts on the general and ophthalmologic observational skills of medical students. Randomized, single-masked, controlled trial. Thirty-six first-year medical students, randomized 1:1 into art-training and control groups. Students in the art-training group were taught by professional art educators at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, during 6 custom-designed, 1.5-hour art observation sessions over a 3-month period. All subjects completed pre- and posttesting, in which they described works of art, retinal pathology images, and external photographs of eye diseases. Grading of written descriptions for observational and descriptive abilities by reviewers using an a priori rubric and masked to group assignment and pretesting/posttesting status. Observational skills, as measured by description testing, improved significantly in the training group (mean change +19.1 points) compared with the control group (mean change −13.5 points), P = 0.001. There were significant improvements in the training vs. control group for each of the test subscores. In a poststudy questionnaire, students reported applying the skills they learned in the museum in clinically meaningful ways at medical school. Art observation training for first-year medical students can improve clinical ophthalmology observational skills. Principles from the field of visual arts, which is reputed to excel in teaching observation and descriptive abilities, can be successfully applied to medical training. Further studies can examine the impact of such training on clinical care.
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ISSN:0161-6420
1549-4713
1549-4713
DOI:10.1016/j.ophtha.2017.06.031