Module overview
This module consists of two student selected components in public health and medical humanities. These aim to offer student choice and to develop students' professional knowledge, skills, and values and behaviour through reflective practice.
Further details will be provided on Blackboard
Aims and Objectives
Learning Outcomes
Learning Outcomes
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- Recognise the rights and the equal value of all people
- Demonstrate an awareness of how health behaviours are affected by the diversity of the patient population
- Identify the social determinants of health and health inequalities
- Identify and analyse different perceptions and experiences of health and illness
- Explore material and techniques from the arts and humanities and assess their effectiveness
- Develop a critical understanding of how health, illness and disability are experienced in the community
- Gather relevant information and present it clearly and appropriately, verbally or in writing
- Practise reflection and write a reflective account
- Critically evaluate representations of health and medicine in the wider cultural environment
- Take responsibility for your own learning and personal and professional development
- Identify features of effective academic poster design
- Demonstrate a wider perspective on health that includes the role of doctors in health improvement, addressing the social determinants of health and health inequalities
- Create a piece of drama, writing, art work, music, a resource or presentation
- Participate in a creative process and identify its effect on personal and professional development
- Determine how the arts and humanities may enable you to develop self-knowledge and support well-being
- Critically engage with public health data, policy and practice
- Access public health information sources and use the information in relation to health improvement
- Communicate effectively and negotiate with peers
- Communicate and work effectively with teachers of other disciplines
- Adopt an approach to medicine that is constantly questioning and reflective
- Demonstrate knowledge of a local health issue
- Demonstrate a willingness and ability to study health topics using the arts & humanities
- Produce an academic poster which includes an interactive component and logic model
- Work effectively in collaboration or independently
- Demonstrate different ways of thinking about medicine and health
- Participate in peer review and give and receive peer feedback
- Demonstrate listening, observation, interpretive and presentation skills
- Work effectively in a team
- Manage uncertainty in an unfamiliar learning environment
Syllabus
In the Health Improvement component, students work in groups to design a health improvement intervention for use with a particular target group in a healthcare setting such as a GP surgery or hospital, or a community setting such as a school or charity. Students choose a local health topic; select a target group and setting; research the background and evidence for the topic; identify the issues involved; create ways of intervening that will address the issues and produce an academic poster that demonstrates the work. Students also evaluate the intervention & reflect upon their performance and the team work.
In the Medical Humanities component, students explore an area of medicine through the humanities and produce a piece of creative work either independently or in small groups. Students can choose from art, music, film, theatre, creative writing, philosophy, history and global health. They also reflect upon the experience and document what they have learned that they can take with them into future professional practice.
In order to meet the learning outcomes, the syllabus will contain teaching in the following areas:
Public Health
Health Improvement
Communication
Team Working & Leadership
Sociology
Psychology
Medical Humanities
Learning and Teaching
Teaching and learning methods
The module will be taught through a range of learning and teaching strategies using face to face and online methods which will include:
Lectures
Seminars
Tutor-led tutorials
Workshops
Self–directed learning
Role-play
Projects
Group work
Type | Hours |
---|---|
Completion of assessment task | 60.5 |
Lecture | 10 |
Seminar | 12 |
Wider reading or practice | 30 |
Supervised time in studio/workshop | 8 |
Preparation for scheduled sessions | 47 |
Practical classes and workshops | 12 |
Project supervision | 8 |
Total study time | 187.5 |
Resources & Reading list
General Resources
Blackboard. Please see the Blackboard module page for current resources. The full reading list for this module is available on the Library Online Reading List at: http://soton.rl.talis.com/
Assessment
Assessment strategy
Students who fail the supplementary activity will be offered a repeat year.
Students may fail an assessment if unsatisfactory attendance or performance means that they cannot achieve all of the learning outcomes because there is not enough time during the module to complete the necessary work.
Summative
This is how we’ll formally assess what you have learned in this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Creative Outcome | 30% |
Health Improvement | 30% |
Reflective account | 40% |
Referral
This is how we’ll assess you if you don’t meet the criteria to pass this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Supplementary activity | 100% |