TY - JOUR A1 - , T1 - Teaching by stealth: utilising the hidden curriculum through body painting within anatomy education JO - Eur. J. Anat. SN - 1136-4890 Y1 - 2018 VL - 22 SP - 173 EP - 182 UR - http://www.eurjanat.com/web/paper.php?id=171911ja KW - Anatomy â?? Body paint â?? Art â?? Medical students â?? Medical education â?? Surface anatomy â?? Hidden curriculum â?? Medical curriculum â?? Teaching anatomy â?? Professionalism N2 - This study considers the hidden curriculum within anatomy education, with a specific focus on body painting. Body painting is not only utilised within anatomy education for teaching surface anatomy and clinical examination, but also to provide a platform for the development of other skills, primarily through the hidden curriculum. The hidden curriculum is the unplanned curriculum transmitting tacit messages to students on values, attitudes, principles and organisation. This may lend itself to deliver values in line with General Medical Council UK registration requirements of â??safety and qualityâ??, â??communicationâ??, â??partnership and teamworkâ??, and â??maintaining trustâ?? in the undergraduate medical curriculum. This qualitative study explored faculty perceptions of the use of body painting as a teaching tool. The hidden curriculum appeared spontaneously as a major advantage of utilising painting. Four major themes emerged; trait development, socialisation, tacit learning and script formation. Anatomy education lends itself to an environment in which to study the hidden curriculum. Results from this study demonstrate faculty awareness of, and deliberate use of, the hidden curriculum as a method to â??teach by stealthâ??, and therefore by actively employing the term pushing at the boundaries of the hidden curriculum concept. ER -