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Attitudes of Australian chiropractic students toward whole body donation : a cross-sectional study
journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by M Alexander, M Marten, E Stewart, Stanley SerafinStanley Serafin, G StrkaljCadavers play an important role in anatomy education. In Australia, bodies for anatomy education are acquired only through donations. To gain insight into educational dynamics in an anatomy laboratory as well as to facilitate body donation programs and thanksgiving ceremonies, it is important to understand students’ attitudes toward body donation. In this cross-sectional study, the attitudes of Macquarie University’s first, second, and fifth year chiropractic students toward body donation were investigated. Macquarie University chiropractic students have a four semester long anatomy program, which includes cadaver-based instruction on prosected specimens. A questionnaire was used to record respondents’ demographics and attitudes toward body donation: personal, by a relative, and by a stranger. It was found that ethnicity and religion affect attitudes toward body donation, with Australian students being more willing to donate a stranger’s body and atheists and agnostics being more willing to donate in general. Furthermore, willingness to donate one’s own or a family member’s body decreases as year of study increases, suggesting a possible negative impact of exposure to cadavers in the anatomy laboratory. This was only true, however, after controlling for age. Thus, the impact of viewing and handling prosected specimens, which is the norm in anatomy classes in Australia, may not be as strong as dissecting cadavers. It is suggested that anatomists and educators prepare students for cadaver based instruction as well as exhibit sensitivity to cultural differences in how students approach working with cadavers, when informing different communities about body donation programs and in devising thanksgiving ceremonies.
History
Volume
7Issue
2Start Page
117End Page
123Number of Pages
7eISSN
1935-9780ISSN
1935-9772Location
Hoboken, NJPublisher
Wiley-BlackwellPublisher DOI
Full Text URL
Language
en-ausPeer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
External Author Affiliations
Macquarie University; University of Newcastle;Era Eligible
- Yes