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The Diagnosis: a Work of Art
By Rochelle Cummings
The art of observation-is it a natural impulse or an exact science?

According to professionals at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UT-Houston), the techniques of observation are honed skills of a trained eye that can be taught, tracked and evaluated.

A Lost Art

Practitioners, applying the abstract to make concrete diagnoses, practiced this indefinable and important art of medicine for centuries. Relying almost solely on a keen eye and thorough, direct, one-on-one communication and evaluation, the doctor would study and assess the patient's speech, manner and condition. It has been a valuable aspect to patient care and diagnosis, and unfortunately, there is a growing concern that the legacy and use of the skill is not being completely carried over into today's medical practice. Today's pressures, complexities involving patient care and advanced technologies encourage a physician to rely heavily on equipment and tools to make a diagnosis, and to make it quickly.

Technological advances have provided insights and opportunities to quickly and more comprehensively evaluate an individual's health and detect illness. However, the resulting unintended consequence of these advances appears to be a diminishing regard for fundamental practices and skills that still provide critical signs of a person's health and well being. One of the challenges of the modern medical school is ensuring the two methodologies continue to co-exist.

A Class of Discovery

At the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, today's medical students are learning to observe patients with the trained eyes of an art critic viewing masterpieces.

"The Art of Observation" is one of only a few programs in the United States that helps physicians-in-training master skills in observation and description. The program utilizes portrait art and medical photographs to emphasize basic, physical-diagnostic skills. Through this elective course for first- and second-year medical students at UT-Houston, future physicians visit the galleries of The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH) to discover how to better observe their patients' manner and behavior.

During this series of three, two-hour evening sessions, students first practice observing various pieces of art and then apply those observation skills to actual patient photographs.

Glenn McDonald, M.D., assistant professor of renal diseases and hypertension at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, created the course in Houston after reading about a similar initiative in New York. Dr. McDonald developed the course last year out of a concern that medical students and residents might be relying too much on technology to make their diagnoses. As a result, the medical school embarked upon a mission to find ways to teach this skill through more engaging and innovative approaches. Dr. McDonald believed this approach would help teach the indescribable but undeniable art of medicine out of the opera of the clinical arena, by opting for an environment that was rich with visual stimulation and devoid of technological distractions.

In the first hour, the students are placed in small groups. Senior museum docents then assign the student groups to various classic portraits and give them time to take in all the details. Later, all the groups gather together in one of the museum's teaching auditoriums to view the various portraits. The students lead a discussion, and the docents, who already know the full story behind each painting, confirm whether their observations match. Looking at art becomes an effective way to isolate and exercise the continuing development of a skill and talent.

During the second part of the course, Dr. McDonald presents students with medical photographs and asks them to interpret the visual clues in each patient's face and body. This is sometimes more challenging than observing the paintings, because the photos are of actual patients. Often, the ravages of illness make it difficult to distinguish age, gender and even race, but after further study, the students begin to recognize subtle details. What they begin to "observe" are the visible manifestations of severe disease.

Bringing science to art "The Art of Observation" is not just a nice evening in a museum; it truly addresses issues that are fundamental to the teaching and practice of medicine. It is one thing to look at pictures and make points, it's quite another to set up objective modules to evaluate observatory skill levels. Working with Lincoln Gray, Ph.D., an otolaryngology professor at UT-Houston, and George Ramirez, student and family programs manager at the MFAH, Dr. McDonald is beginning to take the class to the next level. Gray's research involves evaluating perceptual learning, specifically the effects of experience on perceptions.

Gray has extensive experience objectively evaluating perception. Part of this evaluation will be how experienced physicians observe as differentiated from how new physicians observe. In the end, it is the goal of the team is to detect, differentiate, discover and quantify how people learn to see what's crucial when a patient walks in the door. Many experienced physicians are exceptionally good at this. How do these physicians acquire these skills? Is it natural ability or a talent, which can be learned?

So why start with medical students?

There are many reasons. First, they are there to learn, and they're just at the beginning. By getting them involved early, they have the advantage of many years of practice and the ability to develop good form from the onset of their medical education. They are given a sense of the importance of developing the skill along with an early appreciation of the role observation can play in a diagnosis. Over the years as the skill sharpens, relying on it becomes as natural as walking and talking - it's done with a high degree of competence without even thinking about it.

Secondly, because of the emphasis on clinical care, students are relegated to lesser positions in practical settings. Clinically, they don't have the experience, and they can't make any decisions. They are learning by watching, not doing. In critically important, life-and-death environments, they aren't able to be hands on; yet, they know that in the future, they will need to be able to perform in a similar fashion.

The theory still holds that people learn more when they can enjoy the experience. Dr. McDonald's initial goal was to test this theory. His vision was to get students away from the clinical setting, where they felt removed and ineffective, and into a unique, change of venue where they could relax and fine-tune another area of learning.

There is no question of the interest and demand. The elective class is always filled in 30 minutes or less, and those who are not quick enough to enroll are relegated to the wait list. Currently, individuals from other schools and museums in Fort Worth, Toronto and San Diego are in discussions with UT-Houston and the MFAH, wanting to set up similar programs.

A Portrait of Potential

For the future, there is great potential for this course's practical expansion. The curriculum would translate well for potential continuing medical education (CME) classes, allowing practicing physicians to focus on these important skills in a different environment as well.

"The Art of Observation" is an astute way to educate physicians and promote this excellence. It is essential that we emphasize the fundamental skill of observation before it becomes extinct. These skills are essential in all professions, but especially in medicine. For, no matter how far we have come and no matter how helpful technology has become, it alone does not serve as a replacement for that time honored principle of being able to see what's right before our eyes.


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