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Does medical humanities matter? The challenge of COVID-19

Jane Macnaughton

2023Medical Humanities21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

medical humanities has insisted on: the deep entanglement of social, cultural, historical life with the biomedical. The pandemic has been a time for reinstating the power of expertise of a particular kind, focusing on epidemiology, scientific modelling of potential outcomes and vaccine development. All of this delivered by science at speed.It has been challenging for medical humanities researchers to find purchase in these debates with insights from our more contemplative, 'slow research' approaches. However, as the height of the crisis passes, our field might now be coming into its own. The pandemic, as well as being productive of scientific expertise, also demonstrated clearly the meaning of culture: that it is not a static entity, but is produced and evolves through interaction and relationship. Taking a longer view, we can see the emergence of a certain 'COVID-19 culture' characterised by entanglements between expert knowledge, social media, the economy, educational progress, risk to health services and people in their socio-economic, political ethnic and religious/spiritual contexts. It is the role of medical humanities to pay attention to those interactions and to examine how they play out in the human experience and potential impact of the pandemic. However, to survive and grow in significance within the field of healthcare research, we need to engage not just to comment. There is a need for medical humanities scholars to assert our expertise in interdisciplinary research, fully engaged with experts by experience, and to work proactively with funders to demonstrate our value.

Topics & Concepts

ContemplationMedical humanitiesPandemicHumanitiesThe artsCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Field (mathematics)Meaning (existential)PoliticsSociologySocial sciencePolitical scienceEpistemologyMedicineLawArtPhilosophyPathologyMathematicsDiseasePure mathematicsMedical educationInfectious disease (medical specialty)Empathy and Medical EducationOptimism, Hope, and Well-beingMisinformation and Its Impacts
Does medical humanities matter? The challenge of COVID-19 | Litcius