Medical Double Talents: How Medical Students Living with Chronic Conditions Teach Their Peers

Publication date

2025

Authors

Schoemaker, Casper G.ORCID 0000-0002-9547-0616
Smits, Sanea
Leijenaar, Elsemarijn L.ORCID 0000-0003-3681-1051
Kok, Maaike
Milota, MeganORCID 0000-0002-2144-4175

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Background & Need for Innovation: Approximately 10% of medical students live with a chronic somatic or mental condition. They often feel alienated in the dominant culture of invulnerability in medical education. We developed the 'Medical Double Talents' (MDT) innovation to facilitate medical students living with chronic conditions - MDTs - to teach their fellow medical students. Goal of Innovation: The goals of the MDT sessions are to increase medical students' empathy and compassion for patients with chronic conditions, to challenge the implicit culture of invulnerability, and to help MDTs turn their patient experiences into a strength. Steps taken for Development and Implementation of innovation: The MDT sessions were developed using a co-design approach, engaging medical students with chronic conditions at high levels of patient involvement. These students built a supportive community, received training, and shared their unique perspectives during teacher-facilitated guest lectures and small group discussions. Evaluation of Innovation: In November 2024, 263 medical students participated in 24 MDT sessions. They reported highly appreciating the personal insights shared. The MDTs felt empowered by the experience as lecturers. The student-led dialogue enhanced engagement, though some students desired more information about the medical context before the session. These sessions complement traditional training. Critical Reflection on Your Process: The MDT sessions challenge the implicit culture of invulnerability in medical education. The shared experiences can help foster empathy, self-reflection, and transformation in their peers. This innovation, integrated into Utrecht's curriculum, highlights the need for safe learning spaces and community building to implement similar programs elsewhere.

Keywords

General Medicine, Education

Citation

Schoemaker, C G, Smits, S, Leijenaar, E L, Kok, M & Milota, M 2025, 'Medical Double Talents : How Medical Students Living with Chronic Conditions Teach Their Peers', Perspectives on medical education, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 647–654. https://doi.org/10.5334/pme.1839