Teaching about persistent physical symptoms with the aid of a television show: medical undergraduate students’ perceptions 2026 de Souza et al

Andy

Senior Member (Voting rights)

Background​

Persistent physical symptoms (PPS) are highly prevalent and often challenging to manage, yet they remain marginal in medical education. Innovative pedagogical approaches may help address these gaps.

Approach​

We explored undergraduate medical students’ perceptions of using the Brazilian TV series Basic Unit (Unidade Básica) to discuss PPS and their management in primary health care (PHC). The activity took place in a private medical school in southern Brazil. Students watched an episode portraying a family affected by PPS and participated in guided discussions connecting the fictional case with real clinical experiences. Sixteen students (mostly in their final year) later joined online focus groups. Discussions were audio-recorded, transcribed, and analysed according to Ricoeur’s hermeneutics.

Findings​

Students reported that Basic Unit offered a realistic and relatable depiction of PPS, contrasting with traditional medical dramas that focus on acute, hospital-based conditions. They recognised the importance of communication skills, empathy, and family assessment tools – such as genograms and family meetings – in understanding and managing PPS. The audiovisual format helped them visualise complex psychosocial dynamics and strengthened their grasp of key primary care concepts.

Conclusion​

Using Basic Unit as a teaching tool helped students bridge theory and practice, valuing PHC and the biopsychosocial approach to PPS. This low-cost, context-specific resource can complement communication-skills and family-medicine teaching, contributing to curriculum innovation and reinforcing the role of PHC in addressing complex, person-centred problems.

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This looks like a sick joke. And it might as well be.
Students reported that Basic Unit offered a realistic and relatable depiction of PPS
How would they know that, when it's entirely circular? The depictions are obviously based on the same material and ideas they are taught. I guess by "realistic" they mean that it's what they expect to see.
Using Basic Unit as a teaching tool helped students bridge theory and practice, valuing PHC and the biopsychosocial approach to PPS
This is something someone would have to torture out of me. It really does not make anyone involved look good.

In House's first episode, they mock ME/CFS. House rolls his eyes at the pathetic patient who thinks he has chronic fatigue and has a nurse give him Tic-tacs, candies shaped like pills. The writers of the show involved medical specialists for everything. I'm sure most clinicians would agree it was realistic and relatable as well. Good grief the mediocre loop of failure is so absurd.
 
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