Photo: Chip Thomas, MD, Indian Health Services
“My interest in documentary photography has helped sensitize me to the living conditions and quality of life of my patient population. … To the extent that they’re comfortable with me taking photos, I use these visits as an opportunity to document their lives.” More at the artist-physician’s website, here.
You probably wouldn’t want your doctor to care more about her artwork than helping patients, but a well-rounded physician is likely to bring more depth to medicine.
Jennifer Sokolowsky writes at the Seattle Times that art is becoming part of doctors’ education at Virginia Mason Medical Center in the state of Washington. The idea is to help physicians build both their observational skills and their empathy.
“One afternoon [in June],” Sokolowsky reports, “a group of Virginia Mason doctors huddled, discussing a man who seemed to be in pain. Instead of being in a hospital, however, the doctors were at Seattle Art Museum, peering closely at the 1930s painting ‘Morning’ by Pacific Northwest artist Morris Graves.
“The painting, showing a man lying uncomfortably on a wood floor, portrayed pain in a way that was familiar to the group. …
“ ‘I thought, “Wow, this is a man I’ve seen before in our emergency room, suffering and sick,” ‘ said Dr. Laura Saganic, a Virginia Mason resident physician.
“The discussion prompted another in the group to observe that when they see their patients, they often don’t think about the patient’s circumstances before coming to the hospital. ‘Were they lying on a hardwood floor, were they in a tent?’ Saganic said.
“Building such observational skills and empathy — so critical to the physician’s art — is one of the goals of a relatively new program that exposes doctors at Virginia Mason Medical Center to arts education at Seattle Art Museum (SAM). …
“This kind of training helps address the fact that modern medical education often focuses much more on the factual side of healing, rather than balancing that knowledge with the kind of intuition and empathy the best medical practitioners can bring. …
“One artwork on the itinerary was ‘William Forbes M.D. (Professor Forbes, the Anatomist),’ a 1905 painting by Thomas Eakins. … The discussion ranged from how an understanding of human anatomy is important to both art and medicine, to the evolution of patients’ rights. …
“After last year’s pilot program, [rheumatologist Amish Dave, who spearheads the program] said, ‘We got a lot of feedback and learned that the residents wanted to spend more time thinking about emotions.”
Wow, that statement stands out to me. It gives me hope for the world to be reminded how common it is nowadays to acknowledge the importance of emotions. That is one of the “little” things we overlook amid the barrage of headlines tending to show humanity sliding backwards. More at the Seattle Times, here.
Do tell me your stories of medical providers’ outside interests, artistic or otherwise.
Photo: Chip Thomas, MD
Navajo women with a newborn goat.
Thank you for another uplifting blog post! I loved my last primary care doctor partly because he also played in a marching band (and had helped to start the HONK festival in Davis Square, Somerville, I think). I often have had the sense that “modern medical education often focuses much more on the factual side of healing, rather than balancing that knowledge with the kind of intuition and empathy the best medical practitioners can bring.” Glad to know there are med schools exploring creative ways to nurture empathy and intuition!
Ah, the HONK festival! I’d be tempted to choose a doctor just because he founded the HONK festival! http://honkfest.org/
Can’t say anything about a doctor,but I love that last photo of the women with the new born lamb. I can feel their delight of seeing a newborn. There’s something so special in being involved in a birth of farm animals.
Oh, ha! It’s a lamb? Shows how little I know! Thank you.
Lol! Well, the curly coat is more lamb like, it didn’t even register with me that you had called it a kid. I was just enjoying the photo. Lambs and kids at first do look a lot alike though.
The photographer’s website did say goat, but I am not sure he would know either.