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Teh One Who Knocks
08-19-2017, 04:32 PM
Toni Airaksinen, New York Campus Correspondent - Campus Reform


https://i.imgur.com/QmeqKW8.jpg

A recent study conducted by a group of Ohio University med school professors found that their students are more likely than not to “support the use of trigger warnings.”

Professor Elizabeth Beverly, et al. surveyed 259 medical students for a study published in the most recent issue of Teaching and Learning in Medicine, finding that 31 percent absolutely support “the use of triggers warnings in medical education.”

Meanwhile, 39 percent of respondents said they would “maybe” support their usage, though many of those expressed generally-favorable opinions of trigger warnings, including one student who said they should be used before discussing “very deep issues that potentially could cause an emotional rise in someone.”

One student, for instance, acknowledged that “a picture of anything medically related shouldn’t be too distressing” for someone who is training to be a physician, but then asserted that “sometimes it’s nice to have a warning to mentally prepare yourself for the conversation or information presented.”

Conversely, only 29 percent of the students who were surveyed rejected the use of trigger warnings in the classroom entirely, citing concerns that they enable students to avoid difficult topics or inhibit the academic freedom of instructors.

Beverly told Campus Reform that, at the very least, she and her peers have “identified a need to educate students about triggering topics and explain why trigger warnings can be very subjective to any one individual,” but clarified that since the survey is among the first of its kind, more research will need to be conducted before administrators consider mandating the use of trigger warnings in medical school classrooms.

“Research is needed to test the effectiveness of using triggering warnings in the classroom with both subjective (e.g., reflective writing, interviews) and objective measures (e.g., stress, depression, anxiety, empathy, knowledge questionnaires),” she explained, adding that “if future research shows trigger warnings improve knowledge, empathy, and wellbeing, trigger warnings would be a positive addition to the medical students’ curricula.”

“Our findings did not reach consensus for or against the use of trigger warnings in medical school. However, we did identify a need to educate students about triggering topics and, in turn, how to cope with this information,” Beverly and her colleagues write in the conclusion of their report.

“We need to teach our medical students how to deal with difficult feelings, thoughts, and physical reactions so that when they do encounter patients who share experiences that can be triggering, they know what to do,” the professors add, speculating that “trigger warnings may represent teachable moments for professors to offer insight and techniques on how to handle challenging situations in future patient encounters.”

deebakes
08-19-2017, 04:36 PM
:ffs:

Godfather
08-19-2017, 04:38 PM
My wife walked into the room of a homeless man who was in hospital the other day, and he was buckass naked on the bed with two fingers up his ass trying to get da poop out because you know... heroin bungs you up so badly.

The 31% that hope they'll get trigger warnings are going to have a lot of surprises the next few years :lol:

Teh One Who Knocks
08-19-2017, 04:53 PM
One student, for instance, acknowledged that “a picture of anything medically related shouldn’t be too distressing” for someone who is training to be a physician, but then asserted that “sometimes it’s nice to have a warning to mentally prepare yourself for the conversation or information presented.”

So....does that mean if you are doing your residency somewhere that will put you in an ER or a trauma center that you would need to have someone go check it out for you while you wait outside, and then have them come back and tell you what you will be facing so you can 'have a few minutes' to prepare yourself before going in? :-k

Godfather
08-19-2017, 05:00 PM
It's an easy solve. Just put the Trigger Warning on the application page into med school. I'll even write it for free.


Trigger Warnings
- You're going to face shit, blood, piss, feces and MRSA every single day.
- You will have to stick your finger up someone's ass every day
- You will come home with bodily fluids in your hair and on your Nikes every day
- At least once a week, all female doctor's will be called either a bitch or a bar-maid - by either a nurse or a patient
- At least once a week, a voyeuristic insane patient will grope himself in front of you
- You will witness the local crack-whore who is in with an infection, hooking on the ward
- At least once a week, and older doctor will make crude, sexually charged and/or racist jokes, and if you complain it could jeopardize your career



Feel free to add whatever you like before I send this to the publishers :lol:

Griffin
08-19-2017, 08:30 PM
The only good thing about all these morons filling our institutes of higher learning and will someday be the ones we seek out when needing a professional service is that we wont have to worry about them having guns.

Godfather
08-19-2017, 08:49 PM
Do you worry about older generations of doctors having guns? :lol: