Brown Med School Exhibit Explores Scoliosis Patients

On view at the Warren Alpert Medical School, a series of photographs of people with spine disorders introduces medical students, faculty, staff and visitors to patients and their stories.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] - A new art exhibition at Brown University's Warren Alpert Medical School introduces viewers to the many sides of people living with spine disorders.

Visitors are greeted by two black-and-white photographs of each participant - one straight-on traditional portrait, and another of the person's unclothed back - along with the subject's name and story.

The exhibition, called "A Curved Reality" and created by the nonprofit Back to Healing in collaboration with a physician-scientist at the medical school, aims to advance understanding among the public and health care providers alike of the emotional impact of scoliosis.

The idea to display the photographs in the medical school lobby originated with Dr. Bassel Diebo, an assistant professor of orthopaedics at Brown and a spine and scoliosis surgeon with Lifespan Orthopedics Institute.

While medical students learn about spinal disorders through studying orthopaedics and neurosurgery, Diebo said they might not be fully aware of the effect of a curved back on a patient's well-being. He hopes the exhibition will inspire students to learn more about spinal disorders and the impact that physicians who care for patients with scoliosis can have on those patients' lives.

The exhibition's photos intentionally include patients who have had surgery for scoliosis and those who have not, said Diebo, who has treated four of the participants.

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