posted on 2023-04-24, 00:35authored byHoi F Cheu, Pauline Sameshima, Roger Strasser, Amy R Clithero-Eridon, Brian Ross, Erin Cameron, Robyn PrestonRobyn Preston, Jill Allison, Connie Hu
Background: In an arts integrated interdisciplinary study set to investigate ways to improve social
accountability (SA) in medical education, our research team has established a renewed understanding
of compassion in the current SA movement.
Aim: This paper explores the co-evolution of compassion and SA.
Methods: The study used an arts integrated approach to investigate people’s perceptions of SA in
four medical schools across Australia, Canada, and the USA. Each school engaged approximately
25 participants who partook in workshops and in-depth interviews.
Results: We began with a study of SA and the topic of compassion emerged out of our qualitative
data and biweekly meetings within the research team. Content analysis of the data and pedagogical
discussion brought us to realize the importance of compassion in the practice of SA.
Conclusions: The cultivation of compassion needs to play a significant role in a socially accountable
medical educational system. Medical schools as educational institutions may operate themselves
with compassion as a driving force in engaging partnership with students and communities.
Social accountability without compassion is not SA; compassion humanizes institutional policy by
engaging sympathy and care.
Laurentian University, Canada; Lakehead University, Canada; Northern Ontario School of Medicine University, Canada; University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand; University of New Mexico, USA; Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada