Abstract
Background: The integration of medical humanities into medical education is essential for cultivating compassionate, reflective, and culturally competent physicians capable of addressing the complexities of modern healthcare.
Methods: This article reviews global trends in incorporating humanities into medical curricula, examining their role in fostering empathy, ethical reasoning, communication skills, and professional identity formation. It critically analyzes current curricular frameworks and the challenges posed by inconsistent implementation and lack of standardization.
Results: Medical humanities contribute to epistemological multicompetence by exposing students early to diverse disciplinary perspectives, thus nurturing sustained humanistic values. However, integration is inconsistent and hindered by limited standardized frameworks, affecting its full potential. Effective curricular models are those that are flexible, empirically informed, and adaptable to local contexts while still enabling global comparability and systematic evaluation. The analysis highlights the necessity of a translational medical humanities approach that addresses cultural, symbolic, and interpretive dimensions of healthcare knowledge, enhances shared meaning-making between patients and providers, and supports health literacy. Student feedback generally supports humanities inclusion for empathy and holistic understanding, though curricular engagement and assessment strategies remain critical.
Conclusion: Embedding medical humanities alongside biomedical sciences enriches medical education by preparing clinicians equipped to address complex social, cultural, and ethical challenges in healthcare. A nuanced, interdisciplinary approach to knowledge translation ensures the preservation of patient narratives and fosters ethical, equitable care—imperative in the digital health era. This integrated education model ultimately promotes patient-centered care and improved global health outcomes.