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Teaching Medicine and Medical Ethics Using Popular Culture / edited by Evie Kendal, Basia Diug.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Palgrave Studies in Science and Popular CulturePublisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017Edition: 1st ed. 2017Description: 1 online resource (XV, 171 pages 13 illustrations)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783319654515
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version:: Teaching medicine and medical ethics using popular culture.; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 306 KEN  23
Contents:
Chapter 1. Introduction: The Use of Popular Culture in Medical and Health Education; Evie Kendal and Basia Diug -- Chapter 2. Hidden in Plain Sight: Family Presence During Resuscitation on Prime-Time Media; Zohar Lederman -- Chapter 3. The ER Effect: How Medical Television Creates Knowledge for American Audiences; Jessica Bodoh -- Chapter 4. whyZombie? Zombie Pop-Culture to Improve Infection Prevention and Control Practices; Peta-Anne Zimmerman and Matt Mason -- Chapter 5. An Empirical Study of How Medical, Biomedical and Health Science Students Engage with Professional and Ethical Issues in Medical Television Dramas; Evie Kendal and Basia Diug -- Chapter 6. Teaching Millennials: Twitter, Celebrity Media and Beyond; Basia Diug and Evie Kendal -- Chapter 7. The Needs of the Many Outweigh the Needs of the Few: Teaching Medical Ethics Using Star Trek; Allie Ford and Lynette Pretorius -- Chapter 8. Mind-Melds and Other Tricky Business: Teaching Threshold Concepts in Mental Health Preservice Training; Lynette Pretorius and Allie Ford.
Summary: This book demonstrates how popular culture can be successfully incorporated into medical and health science curriculums, capitalising on the opportunity fictional media presents to humanise case studies. Studies show that the vast majority of medical and nursing students watch popular medical television dramas and comedies such as Grey's Anatomy, ER, House M.D. and Scrubs. This affords us with a unique opportunity to engage and inform not only students but the general public and patients further downstream. This volume analyses examples of medical-themed popular culture and offers various strategies and methods for educators in this field to integrate this material into their teaching. The result is a fascinating read and original resource for medical professionals and teachers alike..
Item type: E-BOOKS
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Barcode
E-BOOKS MWALIMU NYERERE LEARNING RESOURCES CENTRE-CUHAS BUGANDO NFIC 306 KEN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) -1 EBS12137
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Chapter 1. Introduction: The Use of Popular Culture in Medical and Health Education; Evie Kendal and Basia Diug -- Chapter 2. Hidden in Plain Sight: Family Presence During Resuscitation on Prime-Time Media; Zohar Lederman -- Chapter 3. The ER Effect: How Medical Television Creates Knowledge for American Audiences; Jessica Bodoh -- Chapter 4. whyZombie? Zombie Pop-Culture to Improve Infection Prevention and Control Practices; Peta-Anne Zimmerman and Matt Mason -- Chapter 5. An Empirical Study of How Medical, Biomedical and Health Science Students Engage with Professional and Ethical Issues in Medical Television Dramas; Evie Kendal and Basia Diug -- Chapter 6. Teaching Millennials: Twitter, Celebrity Media and Beyond; Basia Diug and Evie Kendal -- Chapter 7. The Needs of the Many Outweigh the Needs of the Few: Teaching Medical Ethics Using Star Trek; Allie Ford and Lynette Pretorius -- Chapter 8. Mind-Melds and Other Tricky Business: Teaching Threshold Concepts in Mental Health Preservice Training; Lynette Pretorius and Allie Ford.

This book demonstrates how popular culture can be successfully incorporated into medical and health science curriculums, capitalising on the opportunity fictional media presents to humanise case studies. Studies show that the vast majority of medical and nursing students watch popular medical television dramas and comedies such as Grey's Anatomy, ER, House M.D. and Scrubs. This affords us with a unique opportunity to engage and inform not only students but the general public and patients further downstream. This volume analyses examples of medical-themed popular culture and offers various strategies and methods for educators in this field to integrate this material into their teaching. The result is a fascinating read and original resource for medical professionals and teachers alike..

Description based on publisher-supplied MARC data.

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