Readers are referred to an article in a 1995 issue of JAMA by C. Morai-Young about a patient's medical experience to help physicians experience health care from the patient's perspective.
The journal invites students to share their medical training observations captured in photographs by discussing how a Georgetown University cardiologist uses self-portraits by a famous 17th century painter to diagnose the painter's physical and mental health.
An ethical case explores whether a workplace physician breached patient confidentiality by divulging an employee's medical information to the employer.
Readers are referred to an article in a 1999 issue of JAMA to discuss whether medical professionalism should be explicitly taught in medical schools and residency programs.
The journal invites students to share their observations and reflections of healing and learning captured in photographs taken during their medical training.
Each month, a new article or book chapter on bioethics will be featured to illustrate points of ethical reasoning and promote discussion about the topic.
Readers are referred to an article by S.A. Schneck in a 1998 issue of JAMA about how physicians make the worst patients and provided with a list of questions about this theory.
Winter Landscape with a Bird Trap, by 16th century Flemish painter Pieter Bruegel, shows how art and visual images have long been used to promote the healing process.