| Korean Med Educ Rev > Volume 27(Suppl1); 2025 > Article |
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Conflict of interest
Gyoungmin Park serves as a student editor of the Korean Medical Education Review, but has no role in the decision to publish this article. Except for that, no potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.
Authors’ contribution
Gyoung Min Park: conceptualization, methodology, writing–original draft, writing–review & editing, and investigation. Tae Yang Yu: conceptualization, methodology, writing–review & editing, investigation, supervision, and validation. Final approval of the version to be published: all authors.
Editorial comments
This paper is noteworthy for its attempt to systematically examine the learning outcomes of medical humanities education using the Kirkpatrick model, clearly demonstrating the appropriateness of the topic selection and the author’s reflective stance as a student researcher. In particular, the effort to structure the broad and diverse field of medical humanities into a concrete evaluative framework, thereby organizing it in a way that makes empirical discussion of educational effectiveness possible, represents a meaningful contribution at the level of student research.
Furthermore, the analytical framework proposed in this study has considerable potential for refinement and extension in future work, for example by providing explicit justification for risk-of-bias assessments, clarifying the criteria used to classify outcomes by level, and strengthening connections with relevant theoretical perspectives. If the literature review were further deepened, the coherence of case selection enhanced, and the discussion developed in a more clearly structured manner, the interpretability and persuasiveness of evaluations of medical humanities education would be further reinforced.
In sum, this paper is a meaningful piece of work that stands out for its clear concern to systematically explore the educational effects of medical humanities education and for the author’s diligent research process, while also indicating promising directions for subsequent studies. As the author accumulates further research experience and continues to refine their methodology, this study has the potential to serve as an important stepping stone for future research on the evaluation of medical humanities education.
| Reference | Program title | MH intervention(s) | Intention/learning goals | Teaching method(s) | Curriculum integration (grade) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kim et al. [25] (2002) | Case-based learning-based medical ethics module | Medical ethics, professionalism | To develop ethical awareness and promote reasoning through real-world clinical cases | Case-based learning, large-group discussion | 1 hr/wk for 1 semester (MS5) |
| Park et al. [36] (2002) | Debate-based medical ethics program | Medical ethics, communication | To help students explore ethical issues through structured debate and develop critical thinking | Structured debate, lecture-based introduction | 1.5–2 hr/wk for 1 semester (MS6) |
| Kim et al. [26] (2005) | Moral reasoning curriculum using the DIT framework | Medical ethics, moral reasoning | To improve students’ moral reasoning ability through case-based discussion and self-reflection | Ethics case discussion, reflective writing, DIT-based learning activities | 2 hr/wk for 7 weeks (MS5) |
| Lee et al. [34] (2007) | Doctor and leadership course | Professionalism, leadership, self-awareness | To develop leadership competencies and a professional identity as future doctors | Blended learning: lecture + project-based team activities | 2 hr/wk for 16 weeks (MS2) |
| Park et al. [30] (2008) | Patient-Doctor-Society curriculum | Medical ethics, professionalism, communication | To enhance understanding of the physician’s social role and responsibilities through structured exploration of ethical and societal issues | Small-group discussion, panel debate, community case exploration | Total 270 hours across 4 years (MS3–MS6) |
| Chung et al. [27] (2009) | Team-based learning medical ethics course | Medical ethics, critical thinking, cooperative learning | To increase student engagement and improve ethical reasoning through cooperative team learning in large-group settings | Team-based learning, IRAT-GRAT quizzes, application exercises, instructor-facilitated discussions | 2 hr/wk for 4 weeks (MS3) |
| Na et al. [32] (2013) | Medical volunteer motivation program | Altruism, professionalism, social responsibility | To explore the effects of volunteer activities on students’ motivation for medicine and sense of social responsibility | Pre-training workshops, medical volunteering, group debriefing sessions | First 1 month (MS1) |
| Chun & Lee [31] (2016) | Debate competence development course | Empathy, critical thinking, communication | To strengthen students’ argumentation skills, empathy, and critical thinking through debate-centered learning | Flipped learning, structured debate, peer evaluation, instructor feedback | 2 hr/wk for 1 semester (MS2) |
| Park & Kang [28] (2016) | Ethics problem-solving program | Moral reasoning, problem-solving, professionalism | To train students in structured ethical decision-making and improve their ability to solve clinical dilemmas | Seven-step problem-solving model, small-group case discussion, individual pre/post-worksheet | 5 classes in medical ethics course (MS4) |
| Jung et al. [37] (2022) | Online medical humanities discussion module | Communication, empathy, patient-centeredness | To raise ethical awareness through the analysis of language, culture, and social context in clinical cases | Online case discussion with thematic modules | 1 semester (MS3) |
| Kim et al. [38] (2023) | Reflective humanities curriculum (portfolio-based) | Self-reflection, humanistic identity | To cultivate self-understanding and humanistic values through structured reflection and peer feedback | Portfolio writing, group discussion, peer evaluation | 2 hr/wk for 16 weeks (MS2) |
| Park & Lee [29] (2024) | Case-based ethics discussion course | Medical ethics, moral reasoning, dialogue | To deepen ethical reasoning and perspective-taking through peer discussion of real-world medical dilemmas | Case-based discussion, small-group debate, peer response worksheets | 2 weeks in medical ethics course (MS3) |
| Yoo & Kang [35] (2024) | Capstone: career and medical humanities integration program | Professionalism, empathy, career identity | To support students’ career exploration and professional growth through reflective integration of humanities content | Capstone project, alumni panel discussion, individual presentations, reflective writing | From 2nd semester of MS5 to 1st semester of MS6 (MS5–MS6) |
| Rho & Lee [33] (2024) | Design thinking for medical humanities (design thinking-problem-based learning) | Empathy, creativity, community engagement | To develop empathy and innovative thinking through design-based problem-solving related to social health issues | Design thinking-problem-based learning, team project, reflective journaling, group discussion | 2 hr/wk for 9 weeks within 15-week MH course (MS1) |
| Reference | Data type | Measured outcomes | Reported educational outcomes | Kirkpatrick level(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kim et al. [25] (2002) | Qualitative (post-course narrative reflections analyzed thematically) | Ethical awareness, peer discourse engagement | Improved moral sensitivity and argumentation skills through structured debates | 1, 2A |
| Park et al. [36] (2002) | Quantitative (post-course Likert survey on engagement and attitudinal change) | Attitude shift, civic debate engagement | Increased social concern and initiation of voluntary discussions beyond class | 1, 2A |
| Kim et al. [26] (2005) | Mixed (pre-post test using DIT; review of reflective writing) | Moral reasoning improvement | Quantified change in moral reasoning levels using the DIT instrument | 1, 2A, 2B |
| Lee et al. [34] (2007) | Quantitative (self-assessment survey on leadership; GPA correlation analysis) | Leadership competency growth, GPA correlation | Enhanced leadership competencies and self-awareness in clinical roles | 1, 2A |
| Park et al. [30] (2008) | Quantitative (pre-post cohort comparison using Likert surveys) | Ethical sensitivity, communication, professional identity | Improved ethical sensitivity, communication, and professional identity through a 273-hour program | 1, 2A, 2B |
| Chung et al. [27] (2009) | Quantitative (pre-post test using empathy and critical thinking scales) | Team learning impact, debate skills, empathy, critical thinking | Acquired skills in debate, communication, and critical thinking; increased empathy and ethical awareness | 1, 2A, 2B |
| Na et al. [32] (2013) | Quantitative (pre-post motivation survey; open-ended items used for interpretation only) | Motivation change related to career goals, humanities engagement, and social responsibility | Recognition of the importance of service and the social responsibility of physicians through the program | 1, 2A |
| Chun & Lee [31] (2016) | Quantitative (pre-post test using Debate Competency Scale, JSPE, and CCTDI) | Debate competence, empathy | Improved debate competence and empathy through flipped learning with measurable outcomes | 1, 2A, 2B |
| Park & Kang [28] (2016) | Quantitative (structured pre-post worksheet using problem-solving scale) | Problem-solving ability and motivation improvement | Increased social responsibility and problem-solving skills after engaging with real-world topics | 1, 2A, 2B |
| Jung et al. [37] (2022) | Quantitative (post-course Likert survey on communication and empathy) | Communication skills, empathy | Improved communication, empathy, and patient-centered attitudes in simulated clinical settings | 1, 2A, 2B |
| Kim et al. [38] (2023) | Mixed (portfolio review and peer feedback; Likert survey on course perception) | Self-awareness, empathy, reflection | Deepened self-understanding, empathy, and philosophical thinking through reflection and peer evaluation | 1, 2A |
| Park & Lee [29] (2024) | Mixed (pre-post worksheet + qualitative analysis using Giorgi method) | Ethical opinion change | Revision of ethical stances on telemedicine and doctor strikes through deepened narrative reasoning and small-group discussion | 2A |
| Yoo & Kang [35] (2024) | Mixed (post-course survey; individual capstone reflections) | Professionalism, social role, empathy | Reflection on empathy, professionalism, and the doctor’s social role through narrative capstone reports, demonstrating personal and ethical growth | 1, 2A |
| Rho & Lee [33] (2024) | Qualitative (reflective essays and group discussion summaries analyzed narratively) | Empathy, team creativity, patient-centered thinking | Fostered empathy and patient-centered thinking through reflective writing and group discussion | 1, 2A |
Gyoungmin Park
https://orcid.org/0009-0005-1306-3064
Tae Yang Yu
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0893-592X
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