Behavioural and social sciences should be part of medical education

Understanding patients’ lifestyles, beliefs and values systems will put medical professionals in a better position to respond, says Kate Hamilton-West

November 11, 2018
Female nurse comforts young woman in hospital corridor
Source: iStock

I was interested to read Matthew Reisz’s recent article “Medical humanities: helping doctors see the whole person”, which argued for an increased focus on medical humanities in UK medical education.  

As a health psychologist based within an interdisciplinary centre for health services studies, I work alongside academic and clinical colleagues with a passion for improving health and social care through research. 

An important aspect of this work is the development of evidence-based curricula for health and social care professionals. To be “fit for purpose” these must be designed to meet the evolving health and social care needs of the population and enable practitioners to develop the skills needed to work within systems that are undergoing rapid change. 

The challenges facing health and social care systems are well documented. For example, data on obesity in England indicate that about two-thirds of adults, a third children aged 11 to 15 and a quarter of those aged 2 to 10 are overweight or obese. Obesity increases the risk of conditions such as cancer, heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, depression and anxiety. 

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The annual cost to the NHS is estimated at £6.1 billion, with costs to social care of £325 million and total costs to the economy of £27 billion. 

Population ageing is also associated with rising prevalence of long-term conditions, which affect about 50 per cent of people aged 50 and 80 per cent of those aged 65 – multimorbidity is increasingly common. 

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Mental health co-morbidities represent a further challenge – about 30 per cent of all people with a long-term physical health condition also have a mental health condition and this figure may be closer to 50 per cent for those with two or more long-term conditions. 

People with long-term conditions find it harder to manage their treatment regimes in the context of reduced psychological well-being and are less likely to take medicines as prescribed. Mental health co-morbidities in people with long-term conditions have been linked to poorer clinical outcomes, reduced quality of life, increased costs to the health service and increased overall morbidity. At the same time, health and social care professionals are facing mounting workloads and greater levels of stress and burnout.

To respond effectively to these challenges, practitioners need to develop an understanding of the way people think and behave, what it means to live with chronic illness, how and why beliefs about health and illness vary and how factors such as beliefs, values and social norms influence the way that people manage and cope with health problems. 

They need to develop new competencies, such as those necessary to support health behaviour change, long-term conditions management and maintenance of psychological well-being (their own and others). This involves drawing on not only the medical humanities but also the behavioural and social sciences. 

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In recent years, the importance of behavioural and social sciences in medical education has been increasingly emphasised. Evidence-based curricula have been developed for teaching psychology and sociology to medical students. 

However, research has also revealed barriers to integration of behavioural and social sciences into medical education and highlighted the importance of commitment from both clinical faculty members and specialists. 

Public Health England recently published a comprehensive strategy to enable public health professionals to use behavioural and social sciences to improve health and well-being. Many of the underlying principles – such as working beyond traditional disciplinary boundaries and adopting a reflective and critical approach that is informed by evidence – are also applicable to the wider health and social care workforce.

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Reisz’s article highlights the struggle medical students face in adopting a more reflective and critical approach to both their own practice and the needs of the patient. 

To do so, the individual must be willing to ask questions that do not have a single “right” answer, to embrace the limits of their own knowledge and engage with human suffering. 

Drawing on a wider range of disciplines may help to equip practitioners for working in this way, providing tools that they can use to formulate an understanding of problems that would otherwise appear messy and intractable, together with knowledge of evidence-based approaches for responding to emotional, behavioural and psychosocial support needs.  

Helping doctors to see the whole person is important, but it is only the first step. Faced with the reality of human suffering, fragility and the multiple interacting factors influencing individual health and well-being, doctors also need to know how to respond. To make this possible, clinical educators and disciplinary experts will need to work together more closely.

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Kate Hamilton-West is a reader in health psychology at the University of Kent

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