The Humanity Gap in Medicine: Why Teaching Compassion Fails Without Living It
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63501/dd20d548Keywords:
Compassion, Clinical Education, Empathy, Medical Humanities, Patient-Centered Care, Healthcare Ethics, Artificial Intelligence, Machine LearningAbstract
In an era of rapidly advancing medical technology, artificial intelligence, and increasingly complex healthcare systems, the human dimension of medicine risks being overshadowed by technical proficiency. This article explores the critical importance of embedding compassion within clinical education, arguing that empathy must evolve from a taught concept to a lived practice of humanity. We examine the theoretical foundations of compassionate care, analyze current pedagogical approaches, critically address the pervasive disconnect between institutional rhetoric and actual practice, and consider the implications of emerging AI technologies for humanistic medicine. The integration of compassion into medical curricula is not merely an educational enhancement but a fundamental prerequisite for ethical, effective, and patient-centered healthcare delivery in an age of intelligent machines.
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