Bachelor of ArtsHealth Humanities

a drawing of the anatomy of the human head

Explore health professions through the perspective of the humanities.

Program Overview

Health humanities is a rapidly growing interdisciplinary field that draws on arts, humanities and social sciences in its approach to health, healthcare and well-being. It allows students to examine and understand health and healthcare from a big picture perspective that encompasses more than clinical diagnosis and treatment.

Health humanities (also called “medical humanities”) includes sub-fields like bioethics, disability studies, aging studies, death and dying, health disparities, health equity, social justice in health, stories of illness, medical history, cultural perspectives on health, visual and performing art therapy, addiction, LGBTQIA health, compassion, burnout and many other intersectional areas related to health, healthcare and the human condition. Students explore challenging and fascinating interdisciplinary topics in classes like “Death and Dying Through the Humanities”, “Creativity and Caregiving” and “Healthcare, Justice, the State and Society."

This program is the only one in the country that offers your choice of three tracks: 


Why Bellarmine?

In keeping with our reputation for innovation, Bellarmine is the first school in Kentucky to offer an undergraduate degree in health humanities. It’s a forward-thinking program supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

The program employs a curriculum designed and taught by faculty from many fields across the university, including bioethics, death and dying studies, narrative medicine, creative writing, nursing, health policy and law, and elder care administration.

Bellarmine has strong connections to a variety of health-related organizations and potential employers, offering students great opportunities for experiential learning, community engagement and job placement.

You can’t ignore the human element in healing. People get better when you care about them. —Dr. Allan Lansing

Facing the Fear: Studying End-of-Life Issues at Bellarmine University

Mar 8, 2022, 12:07 PM by Aaron Amdall

How does a house become “haunted”? Why do we embalm our dead when many other cultures do not? What is green burial and how does it differ from traditional burial? What do we mean when we discuss quality of life or talk about a good death? Why do different religions have different beliefs about practices and traditions surrounding the end of life and death? 

If you’ve ever expressed an interest in subjects like these, you may have been dissuaded from talking about them because they are “depressing” subjects. Many people find issues around death and dying difficult, but understanding these issues is at the heart of Bellarmine University’s Department of Health Care Administration and Public Health’s courses in Death, or End-of-Life Studies, where we believe that everyone benefits from open discussion of this defining event. In fact, research shows that avoiding speaking of death and dying makes our deaths more difficult, while learning about it allows us to approach both our deaths and our lives in richer and more fulfilling ways.  

Health Care Administration and Public Health (HCAPH) faculty teach three courses in End-of-Life Studies:  Death and The Corpse (IDC 101); Death, Dying, and Grief (HLTH 231); and The New Good Death (IDC 401). These courses are appropriate for students from every discipline, although students majoring in the health sciences, psychology, sociology, criminal justice, communication, theology, health humanities, aging studies, senior living leadership, public health, or health care administration will find these courses particularly useful in their future careers. 

Mummies, Memorials, and All Things Postmortem 

From Victorian death photographs to the modern headstone, students in the Death and The Corpse class (IDC 101) trace the origins of our attitudes and practices around death and dying and bring them forward to end-of-life issues we grapple with in culture today. Taught by Dr. Amy Tudor, through Bellarmine’s Interdisciplinary Core (IDC) program, this course takes students through the history of death in America, asking each person to examine their own attitudes about current medical and mortuary practices, as well as the depiction of death in the media and popular culture. In the end, the course will show students how facing the fear of death helps us all – both as people and as a culture – live better lives. 

If students are planning for a career in health care or psychology, they also have the opportunity to take part in the Galileo Learning Community (GLC), a unique living and learning community designed to prepare students for the specific challenges of their chosen career. Through the GLC, students can attend common classes and live in a residence hall with similarly minded students, as well as have access to special programming and co-curricular excursions. These may include visits to Bellarmine’s Gross Anatomy Lab or Louisville’s historic Cave Hill Cemetery, or guest speakers and experts from various health care fields speaking about their research, practices, and experiences. More information on this community can be found on Bellarmine’s Learning Communities website

What students are saying: 
“Death and The Corpse is an eye-opening class that will stick with you long after the course is completed. The class gives the students an expert look on the concept of death through different mediums and cultures that are different from our own…  Dr. Tudor creates an environment that brings humor and unifying discussions to balance out the harsher realisms that comes with the end of life.”  -- Will Catalano, Bachelor of Science in Senior Living Leadership major

The Puzzles of Aging, Dying and Grief 

Students can continue their end-of-life studies by taking HLTH-231, titled Death, Dying, and Grief. Housed within the HCAPH department, this class weaves in the study of such issues as aging, dementia, acute end-of-life issues, and senior living and hospice care, and is required for students pursuing the Bachelor of Arts in Aging Studies. Whether students simply want to follow their interest in end-of-life studies or pursue a career in gerontology, health care administration, senior living, public health, or hospice care, this course will give a foundation for understanding how we change as we age, how we approach our dying time, and how we grieve when those we love are gone.  

What students are saying: 
"After losing my Nana, I knew I wanted to take one of Dr. Tudor's death classes. I had a feeling the course would be able to help me understand death better -- and it did not disappoint. While Death, Dying, and Grief was not a happy class, it was a class that was compelling and insightful… I began to understand why I reacted the way I did when my Nana died and why [others in my family] still struggle with her death. [This class] helped me to understand death as a part of culture and not just a scary, shapeless thing that would eventually get us all. Funny how a class about death has taught me a lot about the living." – Tori Sobotka, Bachelor of Arts in English major 

“Adulting” and Death:  The New Good Death 

The New Good Death (IDC 401) serves as both seniors’ IDC Capstone Seminar and as a “boot camp” for dealing with death and dying in our modern age. In this class, students will come face-to-face with such current controversies as physician-assisted dying, the environmental impact of death, and the ethics of end-of-life treatment. Students will also leave the course with practical knowledge of advance directives, medical proxies, organ donation, burial options, and other practical end-of-life issues. Dr. Tudor is a certified End-of-Life Doula, and she teaches students “real world” tools and lessons that can help them better prepare to approach the end-of-life issues in their own lives.  

What students are saying: 
“The New Good Death offered me an amazing and inspiring perspective on death and dying and lead me to reflect critically on my own death. The diversity of topics in the course made me think critically about how intersected death is in our everyday life in some of the most unexpected places. Dr. Tudor’s instruction made the taboo-ness of mortality feel accessible and comfortable – my peers and I were encouraged to learn through the discomfort to make incredible discoveries!” – Anderson Reeves, Bachelor of Arts in Art Administration major 

Next Steps  

If students are interested in any of these courses, please contact Dr. Amy Tudor in the Department of Health Care Administration and Public Health at atudor@bellarmine.edu, or by visiting the HCAPH department website.  

Program Highlights

This program is the only one in the country that offers your choice of three tracks: aging and end-of-life studies, health disparities and health equity, and narrative health and medical humanities. Students explore challenging and fascinating interdisciplinary topics in classes like “Death and Dying Through the Humanities”, “Creativity and Caregiving” and “Healthcare, Justice, the State and Society.” 

The program also has two internships built into the curriculum, so students gain real-world experience. Each internship is also linked to an upper-level course, so students are encouraged to maximize their internship experience by connecting it to the coursework. 

Because of its emphasis on compassion, equity and patient-centered care, Health Humanities is a field with strong ties to social justice. Social justice is a significant part of the university’s overall mission, and students in the program will learn how to advocate for change in their field.

Learning Outcomes

Students graduating from Bellarmine with a degree in Health Humanities will:

  • Communicate, orally and in writing, using advanced interpersonal skills such as empathy, patient-centered attitudes, individualized decision-making and the ability to relate to others
  • Analyze and articulate, orally and in writing, the ways in which illness and disease shape identity, relationship building, purpose, and accountability for caregivers, health care professionals, patients, families and communities
  • Understand foundational interdisciplinary theory in health humanities and narrative medicine
  • Understand factors that contribute to, and complicate, the roles of health care professionals, caregivers and patients (such as economic, technological, cultural, ethical, spiritual, institutional, legal or political)
  • Engage in innovative problem solving of health care challenges, which promotes health prevention, health stewardship and understanding of the connectedness between mind, body and spirit
  • Advocate for patient-centered care
  • Collaborate between disciplines within health care; between health care disciplines and other disciplines; and between caregivers, health care providers, patients, families and communities 
  • Apply globally informed perspectives to analyze factors that create health disparities with regard to race, ethnicity, class, gender and age
  • Reflect critically on the ways in which concepts of health, illness, disability, aging and mortality are socially and historically constructed

Internships

 

Experienced leaders of highly regarded organizations in the fields of health care, senior living, public health and aging services serve as mentors during internships designed to familiarize students with such operations. Every student can expect to gain first-hand, relevant career experience by completing a departmental rotation in a care center, participating in internal and external meetings or performing approved projects for the host organization.

 

Career Opportunities

One of the most prominent demographic shifts anticipated across the United States – and throughout the industrialized world – over the next 10-15 years is an unprecedented growth in the number of older adults, both in pure number and percentage of the population. Organizations providing long-term care, senior living services, aging care and services, and public health services that address this demographic shift are expected to grow exponentially, as are companies that supply goods and services to those providers and public service agencies that regulate them.

The professions within aging care, senior living services and public health require well-prepared leaders who can effectively plan, organize and direct organizations to achieve strategic goals and advance their respective missions. With one of these health care degrees, students can pursue a wide variety of careers:

  • Administrator or Executive Director: Long-Term Care, Post-Acute Care, Home- and Community-Based Services, Seniors Housing 
  • Organizational Leadership: Finance, Human Resources, Marketing and Public Relations, Environmental and Risk Management, Health Informatics
  • Public Sector: Epidemiologist, Biostatistician, Community Health Administrator, Public Policy Advocate, Government Regulatory Agency Staff
  • Sales: Vendors of Pharmaceuticals, Goods, and Services to Healthcare Providers
  • Private Sector: End-of-Life Doula, Health Science Writer, Health Equity Advocate, Public Health Advocate

Career Development Center

Faculty

Jessica Hume, Ph.D., MFA, Department Chair (email)
Amy Tudor, Ph.D., MFA (email)
Anne Veno, DNP, MBA, RN (email)
Harry Dadds, J.D., LL.M. (email)
Jennifer Thomas, MBA, CPA, CHFP (email)
Chris Ekstrom, Department Assistant

Accreditation

The Department of Health Care Administration and Public Health at Bellarmine University is one of only 15 programs in the nation accredited by the National Association of Long Term Care Administrator Boards (NAB). NAB granted accreditation in 2021 for the Bachelor of Science in Health Care Administration degree. Students with this degree are eligible to sit for the national nursing home administrator and assisted living licensure exams, and are eligible for licensure in the majority of states following graduation.

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Contact Information

Undergraduate Admissions
Phone: 502.272.8000
Email: admissions@bellarmine.edu