A comparison of student perspectives on body donation across healthcare professional programs: From prosection‐ to dissection‐based curricula

Author:

Claveria Alexandra1,Bachour Dona2,Balta Joy Y.34ORCID,Antonacci Rosetta1,Ventura Nicole M.156ORCID,Noel Geoffroy P. J. C.456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ingram School of Nursing McGill University Montreal Québec Canada

2. Faculty of Dental Medicine and Oral Health Sciences McGill University Montreal Québec Canada

3. Anatomy Learning Institute Point Loma Nazarene University San Diego California USA

4. Division of Anatomy, Department of Surgery University of California, San Diego La Jolla California USA

5. Institute of Health Sciences Education, Faculty of Medicine McGill University Montreal Québec Canada

6. Division of Anatomical Sciences, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology McGill University Montreal Québec Canada

Abstract

AbstractDonor‐centered education offers students the opportunity to not only acquire visual and tactile experiences for applying anatomical knowledge but also a chance for students to reflect upon fundamental humanistic principles. The exploration of differences in students' viewpoints on body donation and the utilization of body donors in their education remains unexplored across various healthcare professional programs, which has an impact on student learning and experience. This study aimed to qualitatively examine the similarities and differences in student perspectives regarding body donation across three healthcare professional programs. One‐page reflections from nursing (n = 37), physical and occupational therapy (n = 49), and medical students (n = 66) regarding their experiences in the anatomy laboratory at McGill University were collected and analyzed using a deductive approach based on themes and sub‐themes outlined by Stephens et al. in 2019. Despite differences in their curricula, there were few discrepancies across the programs' reflections suggesting that donor‐based learning had similar effects on each user group. Most students across the healthcare professional programs mentioned that their positive laboratory experiences motivated them to donate their bodies, extending the privilege they had to future generations. Nursing students did not reflect upon the notion that working with body donors provided unique learning experiences in the anatomy laboratory. Likewise, physical and occupational therapy (PT/OT) students did not address the importance of maintaining the privacy of body donors by covering certain body parts during lab. These findings show that prosection‐ and dissection‐based exercises encourage reflective practices associated with these of medical ethics, highlighting an important advantage to including donor‐based learning in anatomical education.

Publisher

Wiley

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