A thematic analysis of students' discussions on death and body donation in international online focus groups
Journal
Anatomical Sciences Education
Journal Volume
16
Journal Issue
4
Date Issued
2023-07-01
Author(s)
Wu, Anette
McWatt, Sean C.
Utomo, Rachel
Talis, Austin
Xiao, Que Yun
Saraci, Kerstin
Brassett, Cecilia
Sagoo, Mandeep Gill
Wingate, Richard
Traxler, Hannes
Waschke, Jens
Vielmuth, Fransziska
Sigmund, Anna
Yamada, Yukari
Sakurai, Takeshi
Zeroual, Mina
Olsen, Jorgen
El-Batti, Salma
Viranta-Kovanen, Suvi
Keay, Kevin
Stewart, William
Mao, Yinghui
Lang, Ariella
Kunzel, Carol
Bernd, Paulette
Kielstein, Heike
Noël, Geoffroy P.J.C.
Abstract
Historically, Anatomy education is an in-person discipline involving exposure to human body donors that facilitates personal and professional growth through, in part, the initiation of reflection on the topic of death. However, during the COVID-19 pandemic the decreased exposure to cadaveric anatomy for many health professions students may have influenced the depth of their individual reflections on this topic. Accordingly, this study aimed to investigate the effect of an alternate approach—focus group discussions between peers with varying degrees of exposure to cadaveric material—that may offer one strategy to stimulate deep reflection on the topic of death. A programmatic intervention was introduced, wherein students (n = 221) from 13 international universities discussed differences in their anatomy courses during small focus group sessions as part of an online exchange program. An inductive semantic thematic analysis was conducted on responses to an open-ended text–response question on how the activity influenced students' reflections about death. Resulting themes were organized into categories that described the content and topics of the students' discussions as they grappled with this sensitive topic. The students reportedly engaged in deep reflection and expressed an increased sense of connectedness with their peers, despite their disparate exposure levels to cadaveric anatomy and being physically distanced. This demonstrates that focus groups with students experiencing different laboratory contexts can be used to help all students reflect on the topic of death and that interchanges between dissecting and non-dissecting students can initiate thoughts about death and body donation among non-dissecting students.
Subjects
anatomy and medical education | dissection | global | peer learning | reflection on death | students | teaching of anatomy
Type
journal article