WEDNESDAY, Aug. 4 (HealthDay News) -- Medical school students
with a humanities background are as successful as those with the
traditional science-based pre-med requirements, according to U.S.
researchers.
The team analyzed 2004-09 data from students at the Mount Sinai School
of Medicine in New York City, which accepts students majoring in
humanities or the social sciences and does not require them to take the
traditional entrance exam, or MCAT. Of the 691 students examined, 85 were
in the Humanities and Medicine (HuMed) program.
The HuMed students were compared to non-HuMed students in seven
outcomes criteria and performed similarly to, or sometimes surpassed,
their classmates with traditional pre-med preparation.
The study also found that HuMed students were more likely to choose
residencies in primary care and psychiatry.
The HuMed program at Mount Sinai was created in 1987 to encourage
students with a humanities background to consider a medical career.
"Our results show that Humanities and Medicine students are not at a
disadvantage for having bypassed standard pre-med requirements," study
leader Dr. David Muller, chair of the department of medical education,
said in a Mount Sinai news release.
"In fact, a liberal arts background may provide these students with
enhanced communications skills and improved bedside manner. These students
also have a heightened interest in primary care, which is important
considering the nationwide shortage of primary care physicians," he
added.
The study appears in the August issue of the journal Academic
Medicine.
More information
There's more on physician training at the American Medical Association.
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