Rust George, Taylor Vera, Herbert-Carter Janice, Smith Quentin Ted, Earles Kathi, Kondwani Kofi
National Center for Primary Care and the Department of Family Medicine, Morehouse School of Medicine, GA 30310, USA.
Fam Med. 2006 Jan;38(1):43-9.
African American physicians remain underrepresented among all medical school faculty, including faculty in departments of family medicine. This paper reports on a faculty development effort aimed at increasing the number and academic skills of underrepresented minority faculty.
In 1992, Morehouse School of Medicine began a faculty development program. The program trains faculty and community-based preceptors in teaching, scientific writing, grant writing, research, and minority career issues. Formats now include a 1-year longitudinal program, 4-6-week stand-alone modules, and an executive faculty development program for physicians from across the nation. Evaluation measures include participant enrollment, completion rate, participant feedback, and self-reported academic competencies before and after the program.
A total of 113 participants completed the program from 1992-2003. Only seven enrollees failed to complete the program. Of 113 graduates, 104 (92.0%) were ethnically African American, Afro Caribbean, or African, while only two were white, non-Hispanic. More than four out of five (81%) now spend at least some time teaching on a regular basis, and 71% spend more than 25% time in teaching roles. Self-reported before-after competencies in specific academic skills such as teaching, writing, research, and grant writing rose from 2.7 to 4.1 on a 5-point scale.
Faculty development is a potentially effective strategy for increasing diversity in academic primary care. Historically black and Hispanicserving institutions can make contributions to training minority faculty. More-rigorous study could elucidate which program elements have the greatest effect on minority faculty academic career choice, scholarly productivity, and career trajectory and the extent to which these programs could be adapted to majority institutions.
在所有医学院教员中,包括家庭医学系教员,非裔美国医生的比例仍然较低。本文报告了一项教员发展计划,旨在增加代表性不足的少数族裔教员的数量并提升其学术技能。
1992年,莫尔豪斯医学院启动了一项教员发展计划。该计划对教员和社区带教教师进行教学、科学写作、基金申请写作、研究以及少数族裔职业问题等方面的培训。培训形式现在包括一个为期一年的纵向计划、为期4 - 6周的独立模块,以及为来自全国各地的医生开展的高级教员发展计划。评估指标包括参与者的注册情况、完成率、参与者反馈,以及计划前后自我报告的学术能力。
1992年至2003年共有113名参与者完成了该计划。只有7名学员未能完成该计划。在113名毕业生中,104名(92.0%)为非裔美国人、非裔加勒比人或非洲人,而只有两名是白人、非西班牙裔。超过五分之四(81%)的人现在至少定期花一些时间教学,71%的人在教学岗位上花费超过25%的时间。在教学、写作、研究和基金申请写作等特定学术技能方面,自我报告的计划前后能力从5分制的2.7分提高到了4.1分。
教员发展是增加学术初级保健领域多样性的一种潜在有效策略。历史悠久的黑人院校和为西班牙裔服务的机构可以为培训少数族裔教员做出贡献。更严格的研究可以阐明哪些计划要素对少数族裔教员的学术职业选择、学术生产力和职业轨迹影响最大,以及这些计划在多大程度上可以适用于多数族裔机构。