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Cinemeducation in Psychiatry: A Seminar in Undergraduate Medical Education Combining a Movie, Lecture, and Patient Interview
Olaf Kuhnigk, M.D.; Julia Schreiner, M.Sc.; Jens Reimer, M.D.; Roya Emami, M.D.; Dieter Naber, M.D.; Sigrid Harendza, M.D.
Academic Psychiatry 2012;36:205-210. 10.1176/appi.ap.10070106
View Author and Article Information

From the Dept. of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical Faculty of Hamburg University, Hamburg, Germany.

Send correspondence to Dr. Kuhnigk; e-mail: o.kuhnigk@uke.de

Received July 30, 2010; Revised December 16, 2010; Revised August 15, 2011; Revised August 22, 2011; Accepted August 24, 2011.

Abstract

Objective  Psychiatric educators are often faced with students’ negative attitudes toward psychiatry. A new type of seminar has been established in order to enable students to gain a deeper understanding of psychiatric illness.

Method  A “cinemeducation seminar,” combining a movie, a lecture, and a patient interview, has been established as part of the undergraduate curriculum at Hamburg Medical School, where 1,032 students attended 39 cinemeducation seminars between 2005 and 2008. A student evaluation covering different aspects of education took place after each seminar.

Results  The students valued the combination of a movie and a seminar and found the movie and the additional patient interview useful for accessing the subject of Psychiatry and understanding the underlying psychiatric illnesses shown in the movies.

Conclusion  From the students’ perspective, this type of seminar seems to be helpful for providing an impression of psychiatric illnesses and enabling students to put themselves in the position of a person suffering from these illnesses. Therefore, we judged the cinemeducation seminar to be an appropriate teaching format in undergraduate medical education.

Abstract Teaser
Figures in this Article

Medical students without psychiatric experience often display negative attitudes toward the subject of psychiatry (1). Nonetheless, medical students’ attitudes toward psychiatry and mentally ill patients are important for their behavior as medical doctors (2). The reduction of this crucial bias in medical students is a fundamental challenge in undergraduate medical education.

Movies have been used for teaching psychiatry in order to increase students’ understanding of mental disorders and to decrease prejudices (3, 4). In postgraduate psychiatry education, the presentation of contemporary movies followed by group discussions has been used since the late 1970s (5), and specific movies have also been applied in clinical case conferences (6). Commercial movies have also been used successfully in order to assist educators training residents in topics that are relevant to psychiatry (7).

As the use of cinema in postgraduate psychiatry training has gained increasing levels of acceptance, a study module for third-year medical students has been established at King’s College, London, that utilizes movies in the study of mental illness, psychiatry, and psychiatrists (8). Another special study module, “Psychiatry and Film,” was developed at St. George’s, University of London, with the intention of encouraging medical students to consider psychiatry as a potential career specialty and to reduce negative attitudes toward mental illness (9). A comprehensive list of good-to-excellent portrayals of psychiatric conditions has been published, along with the name of the actor portraying the character of interest and the country and year of release for each film (10).

Movies have been used successfully for various learning objectives in undergraduate medical education in various formats and settings (1113). Their particular value for improving teaching in the psychosocial disciplines was discussed some years ago, and the recommendation was made to use multi-media modules in settings involving blended learning (14). In spite of the finding that fictional movies can be useful for training observers in recognizing personality pathologies and personality traits (15), no specific teaching format has yet been established and evaluated as part of a broader scheme. It has been shown that a well-designed teaching format helped students who had neutral attitudes toward psychiatry at the beginning of a psychiatry clerkship to develop more favorable attitudes toward psychiatry by the end of the rotation (16). Furthermore, empathy has been named as an essential learning objective by the American Association of Medical Colleges (17). Empathy involves understanding the patient’s situation, perspective, and feelings, communicating that understanding, and acting on it in a therapeutic way (18).

We developed a psychiatric “cinemeducation seminar” for undergraduate medical students by combining a movie with a short lecture and a patient interview, each based on the same disease, as a new teaching format. Participating students were asked whether they valued this teaching format as an introduction to psychiatric illness in general. The suitability of various movies for studying specific psychiatric conditions was established from the students’ perspective with regard to reaching the specific learning objectives: “gaining an impression of a specific psychiatric disease” and “being able to put oneself in the position of a person suffering from the psychiatric disease in question.”

Between January 2005 and December 2008, three to four different cinemeducation seminars took place per trimester (i.e., a maximum of 12 movie seminars per calendar year) and were evaluated at the Medical Faculty of Hamburg University in Germany. The seminars were held during the Psychosocial Medicine module. This module is one of six mandatory modules chosen by the students between Years 3 and 5 of their 6-year undergraduate medical curriculum. Approximately 130 students participate in each module. Students from the Psychosocial Medicine module were able to attend up to four cinemeducation seminars, which took place from 6 P.M. to 10 P.M. Participation was voluntary, and each seminar comprised three elements:

  • A short general introduction to the movie, followed by the presentation of one of the movies from Table 1;

  • A discussion about the movie, plus a short lecture about the specific psychiatric disease seen in the movie, focusing on a diagnosis based on the ICD-10/ DSM-IV and therapy; and

  • A patient interview with student participation, in which a patient suffering from the specific disease shown in the movie discusses his/her personal experience of this disease and its therapy, including the effects of the disease on his/her personal life.

 
Anchor for Jump
TABLE 1.Movies Shown in the Various Seminars and Their Respective Disease-Groups
Table Footer Notea

F00–F03: Organic, including symptomatic, mental disorders, focusing on dementia.

Table Footer Noteb

F10: Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of alcohol.

Table Footer Notec

F20–F29: Schizophrenia, schizotypical, and delusional disorders.

Table Footer Noted

F40–F44: “Neurotic,” stress-related, and somatoform disorders, focusing on anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Table Footer Notee

F60.31: Emotionally unstable personality disorder, borderline type.

After each seminar, a paper-and-pencil evaluation was performed. In addition to the participants’ sociodemographic data, questions covering the general satisfaction of the students with this new teaching format, the selection of the movies, the achievement of the learning objectives, the didactic quality of the teachers, and organizational matters were included. The participant’s agreement or disagreement with each statement was to be indicated on a 6-point Likert scale (1: “I strongly agree;” 2: “I agree;” 3: “I moderately agree;” 4: “I moderately disagree;” 5: “I disagree;” 6: “I strongly disagree.”). The resulting scores were treated as continuous interval-scaled variables. All data were analyzed with SPSS 17.0. In addition to calculating the descriptive parameters, frequency, central tendency (arithmetic mean [M]), and dispersion (standard deviation [SD]), several comparisons of the means were made in order to identify differences between individual movies or movies according to disease-groups; that is, two-sample t-tests and one-way analysis of variance with multiple-comparison correction according to Bonferroni, which includes an adjustment of the family-wise error rate (19), were performed. The tests were two-tailed, with a critical p value of 0.05.

Evaluation questionnaires from 12 trimesters (between January 2005 and December 2008), covering 39 seminars were included in this study. A total of 1,032 students (approximately 33% of all medical students in the average clinical-year group) returned the questionnaires. Of these respondents, 27.0% (N=279) were men, and 71.8% (N=741) were women; 1.2% (N=12) did not answer the question regarding gender. The mean age of the respondents was 25.2 (SD: 4.7) years. The majority of participants (89.5%) were full-time students at the Medical Faculty of Hamburg, Germany, and 73.5% of the students were enrolled in the thematic block Psychosocial Medicine, which includes the subject Psychiatry; 26.5% were studying a different thematic block, such as Diagnostic Medicine or Operative Medicine. About 10% of participants were studying in other faculties (e.g., psychology). All of the calculated means were within the positive range (1–3) of the 6-point Likert scale (Table 2). The students particularly valued the combination of movie and seminar (1.4 [SD: 0.7]), and felt that the cinemeducation seminar was useful for giving them access to the subject of psychiatry (1.5 [SD: 0.7]). They found the patient interview to be a helpful addition for understanding the underlying psychiatric disease (1.6 [SD: 0.9]). All learning objectives were ranked within a satisfactory range (1.8–3.0), with “I gained an impression of the treatment options for the specific disease” being given the lowest rating (3.0 [SD: 1.3]). The organization of the seminar as a whole was rated positively (1.5 [SD: 0.8]).

 
Anchor for Jump
TABLE 2.Results of the Students’ Evaluation of All of the Cinemeducation Seminars in the Years 2005 to 2008
Table Footer Note

SD: standard deviation; XXX: the respective psychiatric disease shown during the respective cinemeducation seminar.

Table Footer Notea

6-point Likert scale (1: “I strongly agree;” to 6: “I strongly disagree.”).

Table Footer Noteb

XXX: the respective psychiatric disease shown during the respective cinemeducation seminar.

All movies were compared with regard to their usefulness in reaching the learning objectives “I found the movie appropriate to gain an impression of XXX disease” (XXX: the respective psychiatric illness shown during the cinemeducation seminar) and “The movie helped me to put myself in the position of a person suffering from XXX disease,” independently of the disease category being covered (Table 3). The highest-ranking films for being “appropriate for gaining an impression of a certain psychiatric disease” were Dark Days, a film about depression (1.4 [SD: 0.9]) and A Beautiful Mind (1.5 [SD: 0.7]) and The White Sound (1.6±0.8), which are both movies about schizophrenia. As far as being “helpful with regard to putting myself in the position of a person suffering from a certain psychiatric disease,” A Beautiful Mind (1.6 [SD: 0.7]), The White Sound (1.9 [SD: 0.9]), Iris (2.0 [SD: 1.0]), and Alone (2.0 [SD: 0.9]) were assigned the highest ranks.

 
Anchor for Jump
TABLE 3.Mean Scores of the Movies With Regard to the Learning Objectives “I found the movie appropriate to gain an impression of XXX disease” and “The movie helped me to put myself in the position of a person suffering from XXX disease.”
Table Footer Notea

XXX: The respective psychiatric disease shown during the respective cinemeducation seminar.

Table Footer Noteb

F00–F03: Organic. including symptomatic. mental disorders, focusing on dementia.

Table Footer Notec

F10: Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of alcohol.

Table Footer Noted

F20–F29: Schizophrenia. Schizotypical, and delusional disorders.

Table Footer Notee

F40–F44: “Neurotic,” stress-related, and somatoform disorders, focusing on anxiety und obsessive-compulsive disorders.

Table Footer Notef

F60.31: Emotionally unstable personality disorder, borderline type.

Table Footer Noteg

6-point Likert scale (1: “I strongly agree;” to 6: “I strongly disagree.”)

Movies have been used in various educational settings for a wide range of learning objectives in undergraduate and postgraduate medical education (15, 2024). However, most studies regarding a psychiatric movie-seminar format included very few participants (8, 15, 22), and nearly all of the seminars combined the presentation of a movie with a discussion and an evaluation only (5, 22). A new format for a cinemeducation seminar, consisting of the presentation of a movie, a short lecture, and a patient interview, including a discussion, was implemented in our study. All three parts covered the same disease or disorder. The students rated this format very highly. They felt that the cinemeducation seminar gave them access to the subject of psychiatry and that the patient interview was useful for understanding the underlying psychiatric disease presented in the movie. The learning-objective “I gained an impression of the treatment options for a certain psychiatric disease” received the lowest rating, as “treatment” was not a specific learning objective of the movie seminar, but rather part of the obligatory lectures. Nevertheless, Walter et al. (21) showed that treatment options can also be covered in movie seminars when this learning objective is intended. Even though the cinemeducation seminar was an optional course and was held at unusual hours (6 P.M. to 10 P.M.), it was well attended (by up to 59 participants per seminar), thereby reflecting the students’ educational interests. Because educational programs can influence the attitudes of medical students toward psychiatry (25), and as the students seemed to feel that the learning objectives were reached very well with this new type of seminar, it might find its place within the regular undergraduate medical curriculum.

Dark Days, a film about depression, and two movies about schizophrenia, A Beautiful Mind and The White Sound, were regarded as the most useful movies for the learning objectives “I found the movie appropriate for gaining an impression of a certain psychiatric disease,” and “The movie helped me to put myself in the position of a person suffering from a certain psychiatric disease.” A Beautiful Mind has been described as being very suitable for teaching about schizophrenia, as it shows a range of symptoms and complications and gives the viewers a sense of hope for recovery (26). The White Sound had positive effects on a subgroup of non-medical people who had previously been in contact with people suffering from schizophrenia by reducing prejudices and stereotypical attitudes (27). Within the group of movies covering “neurotic,” stress-related, and somatoform disorders, the movie Elling seems to be the most valuable for reaching the learning objectives. This evaluation might be helpful in improving the selection of movies for future seminars. The suitability of using commercially-available movies to teach students about borderline personality disorders has previously been demonstrated (28) and received high marks from the students in our seminars. To introduce a seminar with a similar format into the mandatory part of a curriculum, a careful selection of suitable conditions and the relevant movies (with regard to the specific learning objectives) needs to be made. A comprehensive list of good-to-excellent portrayals of psychiatric conditions has recently been published (10). It covers the major categories of mental illness and can help teachers to make choices depending on their requirements for meeting the learning objectives. An analysis of more than 450 movies regarding the image of psychiatrists and the influence of psychoanalytical ideas in American movies could also be recommended to interested readers who would like to gain a deeper understanding of psychiatry in movies (29).

Our study had several limitations. The movie seminar was an optional seminar, which could lead to biased results if only students with a special interest in psychiatry participated. This could also increase positive evaluation results. Students’ subjective experiences and opinions only were used for the analysis of whether the learning objectives had been reached. Although this seminar gave the students the impression that they had reached the learning objective of recognizing the symptoms of a certain psychiatric disease, this was not assessed by introducing control groups because of the legal regulations governing voluntary courses. Furthermore, the students were not asked at the beginning of the study how they felt about the respective learning objectives, meaning that no pre–post comparison was possible regarding these items or a shift in attitude, which was an additional limitation of our study. Some students may have had other types of professional or personal experience with people with mental disorders in a private context, which could have been a confounder in this study.

In summary, with regard to the new teaching format of the cinemeducation seminar, including the presentation of a commercially-available movie, a short lecture, and a patient-interview with discussion, the students felt that they had been able to access the subject of psychiatry and improve their understanding of the psychiatric disease in question. Movies about dementia, schizophrenia, and borderline diseases were particularly useful, from the students’ perspective, for gaining an impression of a certain psychiatric disease and for enabling students to put themselves in the position of a person suffering from that disease. The results suggest possible benefits of the incorporation of this teaching format into the undergraduate psychiatric curriculum. Future studies could focus on the degree to which the seminar enhances students’ psychiatric knowledge-base and attitudes toward individuals experiencing psychiatric disorders when compared with traditional teaching approaches.

Kuhnigk  O;  Strebel  B;  Schilauske  J  et al.:  Attitudes of medical students towards psychiatry: effects of training, courses in psychiatry, psychiatric experience and gender.  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract   2007; 12:87–101
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Wilkinson  DG;  Toone  BK;  Greer  S:  Medical students’ attitudes to psychiatry at the end of the clinical curriculum.  Psychol Med   1993; 13:655–658
[CrossRef]
 
Hyler  SE;  Moore  J:  Teaching psychiatry? Let Hollywood help! Acad Psychiatry   1996; 20:212–219
 
Wedding  D;  Boyd  MA;  Niemiec  RM:  Movies and Mental Illness: Using Films to Understand Psychopathology , 2nd Edition.  Gottingen, Germany,  Hogrefe & Huber,  2005
 
Fritz  GK;  Poe  RO:  The role of a cinema seminar in psychiatric education.  Am J Psychiatry   1979; 136:207–210
[PubMed]
 
Tarsitani  L;  Brugnoli  R;  Pancheri  P:  Cinematic clinical psychiatric cases in graduate medical education.  Med Educ   2004; 38:1187–1202
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Sondheimer  A:  The life stories of children and adolescents: using commercial films as teaching aids.  Acad Psychiatry   2000; 24:214–224
[CrossRef]
 
Datta  V:  Madness and the movies: an undergraduate module for medical students.  Int Rev Psychiatry   2009; 21:261–266
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Akram  A;  O’Brien  A;  O’Neill  A  et al.:  Crossing the line: learning psychiatry at the movies.  Int Rev Psychiatry   2009; 21:267–268
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Robinson  DJ:  Reel Psychiatry: Movie Portrayals of Psychiatric Conditions .  Port Huron, MI,  Rapid Psychler Press,  2003
 
Blasco  PG;  Moreto  G;  Roncoletta  AFT  et al.:  Using movie clips to foster learners’ reflection: improving education in the affective domain.  Fam Med   2006; 38:94–96
[PubMed]
 
Searight  HR:  Cinemeducation: a comprehensive guide to using film in medical education.  Fam Med   2006; 38:216–217
 
Zagvazdin  Y:  Movies and emotional engagement: laughing matters in lecturing.  Fam Med   2007; 39:245–247
[PubMed]
 
Rosendahl  J;  Tittelbach  J;  Strauss  B:  [Improving medical education in psychosocial disciplines by multimedia tools].  Psychother Psychosom Med Psychol   2003; 53:79–82
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Hesse  M;  Schliewe  S;  Thomsen  RR:  Rating of personality disorder features in popular movie characters.  BMC Psychiatry   2005; 5:45–52
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Niedermier  JA;  Bornstein  R;  Brandemihl  A:  The junior medical student psychiatry clerkship: curriculum, attitudes, and test performance.  Acad Psychiatry   2006; 30:136–143
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Stepien  KA;  Baernstein  A:  Educating for empathya; a review.  J Gen Intern Med   2006; 21:524–530
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Mercer  SW;  Reynolds  WJ:  Empathy and quality of care.  Br J Gen Pract   2002; 52(Suppl):S9–S12
[PubMed]
 
Brosius F: SPSS 16, Das mitp Standardwerk. MITP Redline, Heidelberg. 1st ed., 496, 2008
 
Misch  DA:  Psychosocial formulation training using commercial films.  Acad Psychiatry   2000; 24:99–104
[CrossRef]
 
Walter  G;  McDonald  A;  Rey  JM  et al.:  Medical student knowledge and attitudes regarding ECT prior to and after viewing ECT scenes from movies.  J ECT   2002; 18:43–46
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Sierles  FS:  Using film as the basis of an American Culture course for first-year psychiatry residents.  Acad Psychiatry   2005; 29:100–104
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Zerby  SA:  Using the science fiction film Invaders From Mars in a child psychiatry seminar.  Acad Psychiatry   2005; 29:316–321
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Alexander  M;  Pavlov  A;  Lenahan  P:  Lights, camera, action: using film to teach the ACGME competencies.  Fam Med   2007; 39:20–23
[PubMed]
 
Kuhnigk  O;  Hofmann  M;  Böthern  AM  et al.:  Influence of educational programs on attitudes of medical students towards psychiatry: effects of psychiatric experience, gender, and personality dimensions.  Med Teach   2009; 31:e303–e310
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Rosenstock  J:  Beyond A Beautiful Mind: film choices for teaching schizophrenia.  Acad Psychiatry   2003; 27:117–122
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Baumann  A;  Zaeske  H;  Gaebel  W:  [The image of people with mental illness in movies: effects on beliefs, attitudes, and social distance, considering as example the movie “The White Noise.”] Psychiatr Prax   2003; 30:372–378
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Hyler  SE;  Schanzer  B:  Using commercially available films to teach about borderline personality disorder.  Bull Menninger Clin   1997; 61:458–468
[PubMed]
 
Gabbard  GO;  Gabbard  K:  Psychiatry and the Cinema , 2nd Edition.  Washington, DC,  American Psychiatric Press,  1999
 
References Container
Anchor for Jump
TABLE 1.Movies Shown in the Various Seminars and Their Respective Disease-Groups
Table Footer Notea

F00–F03: Organic, including symptomatic, mental disorders, focusing on dementia.

Table Footer Noteb

F10: Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of alcohol.

Table Footer Notec

F20–F29: Schizophrenia, schizotypical, and delusional disorders.

Table Footer Noted

F40–F44: “Neurotic,” stress-related, and somatoform disorders, focusing on anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Table Footer Notee

F60.31: Emotionally unstable personality disorder, borderline type.

Anchor for Jump
TABLE 2.Results of the Students’ Evaluation of All of the Cinemeducation Seminars in the Years 2005 to 2008
Table Footer Note

SD: standard deviation; XXX: the respective psychiatric disease shown during the respective cinemeducation seminar.

Table Footer Notea

6-point Likert scale (1: “I strongly agree;” to 6: “I strongly disagree.”).

Table Footer Noteb

XXX: the respective psychiatric disease shown during the respective cinemeducation seminar.

Anchor for Jump
TABLE 3.Mean Scores of the Movies With Regard to the Learning Objectives “I found the movie appropriate to gain an impression of XXX disease” and “The movie helped me to put myself in the position of a person suffering from XXX disease.”
Table Footer Notea

XXX: The respective psychiatric disease shown during the respective cinemeducation seminar.

Table Footer Noteb

F00–F03: Organic. including symptomatic. mental disorders, focusing on dementia.

Table Footer Notec

F10: Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of alcohol.

Table Footer Noted

F20–F29: Schizophrenia. Schizotypical, and delusional disorders.

Table Footer Notee

F40–F44: “Neurotic,” stress-related, and somatoform disorders, focusing on anxiety und obsessive-compulsive disorders.

Table Footer Notef

F60.31: Emotionally unstable personality disorder, borderline type.

Table Footer Noteg

6-point Likert scale (1: “I strongly agree;” to 6: “I strongly disagree.”)

+

References

Kuhnigk  O;  Strebel  B;  Schilauske  J  et al.:  Attitudes of medical students towards psychiatry: effects of training, courses in psychiatry, psychiatric experience and gender.  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract   2007; 12:87–101
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Wilkinson  DG;  Toone  BK;  Greer  S:  Medical students’ attitudes to psychiatry at the end of the clinical curriculum.  Psychol Med   1993; 13:655–658
[CrossRef]
 
Hyler  SE;  Moore  J:  Teaching psychiatry? Let Hollywood help! Acad Psychiatry   1996; 20:212–219
 
Wedding  D;  Boyd  MA;  Niemiec  RM:  Movies and Mental Illness: Using Films to Understand Psychopathology , 2nd Edition.  Gottingen, Germany,  Hogrefe & Huber,  2005
 
Fritz  GK;  Poe  RO:  The role of a cinema seminar in psychiatric education.  Am J Psychiatry   1979; 136:207–210
[PubMed]
 
Tarsitani  L;  Brugnoli  R;  Pancheri  P:  Cinematic clinical psychiatric cases in graduate medical education.  Med Educ   2004; 38:1187–1202
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Sondheimer  A:  The life stories of children and adolescents: using commercial films as teaching aids.  Acad Psychiatry   2000; 24:214–224
[CrossRef]
 
Datta  V:  Madness and the movies: an undergraduate module for medical students.  Int Rev Psychiatry   2009; 21:261–266
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Akram  A;  O’Brien  A;  O’Neill  A  et al.:  Crossing the line: learning psychiatry at the movies.  Int Rev Psychiatry   2009; 21:267–268
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Robinson  DJ:  Reel Psychiatry: Movie Portrayals of Psychiatric Conditions .  Port Huron, MI,  Rapid Psychler Press,  2003
 
Blasco  PG;  Moreto  G;  Roncoletta  AFT  et al.:  Using movie clips to foster learners’ reflection: improving education in the affective domain.  Fam Med   2006; 38:94–96
[PubMed]
 
Searight  HR:  Cinemeducation: a comprehensive guide to using film in medical education.  Fam Med   2006; 38:216–217
 
Zagvazdin  Y:  Movies and emotional engagement: laughing matters in lecturing.  Fam Med   2007; 39:245–247
[PubMed]
 
Rosendahl  J;  Tittelbach  J;  Strauss  B:  [Improving medical education in psychosocial disciplines by multimedia tools].  Psychother Psychosom Med Psychol   2003; 53:79–82
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Hesse  M;  Schliewe  S;  Thomsen  RR:  Rating of personality disorder features in popular movie characters.  BMC Psychiatry   2005; 5:45–52
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Niedermier  JA;  Bornstein  R;  Brandemihl  A:  The junior medical student psychiatry clerkship: curriculum, attitudes, and test performance.  Acad Psychiatry   2006; 30:136–143
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Stepien  KA;  Baernstein  A:  Educating for empathya; a review.  J Gen Intern Med   2006; 21:524–530
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Mercer  SW;  Reynolds  WJ:  Empathy and quality of care.  Br J Gen Pract   2002; 52(Suppl):S9–S12
[PubMed]
 
Brosius F: SPSS 16, Das mitp Standardwerk. MITP Redline, Heidelberg. 1st ed., 496, 2008
 
Misch  DA:  Psychosocial formulation training using commercial films.  Acad Psychiatry   2000; 24:99–104
[CrossRef]
 
Walter  G;  McDonald  A;  Rey  JM  et al.:  Medical student knowledge and attitudes regarding ECT prior to and after viewing ECT scenes from movies.  J ECT   2002; 18:43–46
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Sierles  FS:  Using film as the basis of an American Culture course for first-year psychiatry residents.  Acad Psychiatry   2005; 29:100–104
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Zerby  SA:  Using the science fiction film Invaders From Mars in a child psychiatry seminar.  Acad Psychiatry   2005; 29:316–321
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Alexander  M;  Pavlov  A;  Lenahan  P:  Lights, camera, action: using film to teach the ACGME competencies.  Fam Med   2007; 39:20–23
[PubMed]
 
Kuhnigk  O;  Hofmann  M;  Böthern  AM  et al.:  Influence of educational programs on attitudes of medical students towards psychiatry: effects of psychiatric experience, gender, and personality dimensions.  Med Teach   2009; 31:e303–e310
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Rosenstock  J:  Beyond A Beautiful Mind: film choices for teaching schizophrenia.  Acad Psychiatry   2003; 27:117–122
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Baumann  A;  Zaeske  H;  Gaebel  W:  [The image of people with mental illness in movies: effects on beliefs, attitudes, and social distance, considering as example the movie “The White Noise.”] Psychiatr Prax   2003; 30:372–378
[CrossRef] | [PubMed]
 
Hyler  SE;  Schanzer  B:  Using commercially available films to teach about borderline personality disorder.  Bull Menninger Clin   1997; 61:458–468
[PubMed]
 
Gabbard  GO;  Gabbard  K:  Psychiatry and the Cinema , 2nd Edition.  Washington, DC,  American Psychiatric Press,  1999
 
References Container
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