Personalization above anonymization? A role for considering the humanity and spirituality of the dead in anatomical education

IF 5.2 2区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Anatomical Sciences Education Pub Date : 2024-04-28 DOI:10.1002/ase.2431
Michelle D. Lazarus, Peter Douglas, Georgina C. Stephens
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Abstract

Clinical anatomy education is meant to prepare students for caring for the living, often by working with the dead. By their nature many clinical anatomy education programs privilege topographical form  over the donor's humanity. This inbalance between the living and the dead generates tensions between the tangible and the spiritual insofar as semblances of the humanity of donors endure even in depictions and derivatives. This article argues that considering the relevance of spirituality, and what endures of a donor's humanity after death, would enhance contemporary anatomy education and the ethical treatment of human body donors (and derivatives). In developing this argument, we (the authors) address the historical connection between spirituality and anatomy, including the anatomical locations of the soul. This serves as a basis for examining the role of the mimetic—or imitative—potential of deceased human donors as representations of the living. We deliberate on the ways in which the depersonalization and anonymization of those donating challenge the mimetic purpose of human body donors and the extent to which such practices are misaligned with the health care shift  from a biomedical to a biopsychosocial model. Weighing up the risks and opportunities of anonymization versus personalization of human body donors, we propose curricula that could serve to enhance the personalization of human donors to support students learning topographical form. In doing so, we argue that the personalization of human donors and depictions could prevent the ill effects of digital representations going “viral,” and enhance opportunities for donors to help the general public learn more about the human form.

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个性化高于匿名化?在解剖学教育中考虑死者的人性和灵性的作用
临床解剖学教育旨在培养学生为活人提供护理,通常是通过与死人打交道。就其本质而言,许多临床解剖学教育课程都偏重地形,而非捐献者的人性。活人与死人之间的这种不平衡造成了有形与精神之间的紧张关系,因为即使在描绘和衍生物中,捐献者人性的影子仍然存在。本文认为,考虑灵性的相关性,以及捐献者死后人性的延续,将加强当代解剖学教育和对人体捐献者(及其衍生品)的伦理处理。在提出这一论点的过程中,我们(作者)探讨了灵性与解剖学之间的历史联系,包括灵魂在解剖学上的位置。在此基础上,我们研究了已故人体捐献者作为生者代表的拟态--或模仿--潜能的作用。我们探讨了捐献者的去人格化和匿名化如何挑战人体捐献者的拟态目的,以及这种做法在多大程度上与医疗保健从生物医学模式向生物心理社会模式的转变相悖。在权衡人体捐献者匿名化与个性化的风险和机遇后,我们提出了一些课程建议,这些建议可用于加强人体捐献者的个性化,以支持学生学习拓扑形式。在此过程中,我们认为人体捐献者和描述的个性化可以防止数字表征 "病毒式 "传播的不良影响,并增加捐献者帮助公众了解人体形态的机会。
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来源期刊
Anatomical Sciences Education
Anatomical Sciences Education Anatomy/education-
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
39.70%
发文量
91
期刊介绍: Anatomical Sciences Education, affiliated with the American Association for Anatomy, serves as an international platform for sharing ideas, innovations, and research related to education in anatomical sciences. Covering gross anatomy, embryology, histology, and neurosciences, the journal addresses education at various levels, including undergraduate, graduate, post-graduate, allied health, medical (both allopathic and osteopathic), and dental. It fosters collaboration and discussion in the field of anatomical sciences education.
期刊最新文献
Refocusing graduate gross anatomy training: Curating future content experts. Anatomical Sciences Education Vol. 17, Issue 8, 2024 Cover Image Editorial Board and Table of Contents Comparing assisting technologies for proficiency in cardiac morphology: 3D printing and mixed reality versus CT slice images for morphological understanding of congenital heart defects by medical students. Effect of peer facilitation in anatomy small group curriculum on academic performance and retention: A pilot study.
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