Important new study: Medical Students’ Exposure to the Humanities Correlates with Positive Personal Qualities and Reduced Burnout: A Multi-Institutional U.S. Survey JGIM: Journal of General Internal Medicine, January 2018 https://t.co/9nvWhgtSr0
About this article by Dr. Mangione, @megan_voeller and colleagues: https://t.co/oPT3dI8eVE https://t.co/IUw253D6Vk
RT @megan_voeller: Excited to be part of this study in @JournalGIM, led by @JeffersonUniv's Dr. Sal Mangione, linking medical student expos…
RT @megan_voeller: Excited to be part of this study in @JournalGIM, led by @JeffersonUniv's Dr. Sal Mangione, linking medical student expos…
Excited to be part of this study in @JournalGIM, led by @JeffersonUniv's Dr. Sal Mangione, linking medical student exposure to arts & humanities with higher empathy, wisdom and lower burnout. https://t.co/KgenZbTPjY
RT @JournalGIM: Medical Students’ Exposure to the Humanities Correlates with Positive Personal Qualities and Reduced Burnout: A Multi-Insti…
Medical Students’ Exposure to the Humanities Correlates with Positive Personal Qualities and Reduced Burnout: A Multi-Institutional U.S. Survey https://t.co/Dc1ja3SkNx