Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Medical Education
Date Submitted: Oct 24, 2025
Date Accepted: Mar 27, 2026
From Anatomy to Innovation: Embedding Patient-Centred Design in Medical Education
ABSTRACT
Medical education has traditionally focused on mastering biomedical knowledge, clinical skills and professionalism. Yet it remains poorly equipped to prepare doctors for the complex, rapidly changing health systems they will work in. Despite repeated calls for transformative learning progress in teaching system innovation has been limited. Current curricula produce clinicians adept at treating disease but ill-prepared to address system failures or lead change. Embedding patient-centred innovation within training offers a solution. This approach integrates design thinking, value-based healthcare and co-design with patients to cultivate the metacompetence required to manage change. Evidence shows that what works in practice is embedding innovation within quality improvement, multidisciplinary collaboration and providing protected time for engagement. Teaching these principles early can normalise innovation as integral, not peripheral, to clinical practice. Lessons from the successful integration of communication skills and ethics into curricula demonstrate that cultural transformation is achievable. Practical strategies include incorporating design-thinking modules, patient co-creation exercises and innovation projects alongside existing quality improvement and leadership programmes. Reframing innovation as a professional responsibility rather than an optional pursuit can empower clinicians to act as catalysts for system transformation. From anatomy to innovation, medical education must once again evolve, cultivating doctors not only skilled in treating patients but also capable of healing the systems that serve them.
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© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.