Cox Elizabeth D, Koscik Rebecca L, Olson Curtis A, Behrmann Ann T, Hambrecht Marijka A, McIntosh Gwen C, Kokotailo Patricia K
Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin 53726, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2006 Oct;31(4):342-9. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2006.06.024. Epub 2006 Aug 28.
Recognition of health disparities among underserved individuals, whose demographic, geographic, or economic characteristics impede access to health-related services, has led to calls for the development of medical school curricula that address care for the underserved, but reports of the development and evaluation of such curricula are limited.
Two formats of a curriculum addressing care for the underserved were developed and implemented during the 6-week pediatric clerkship for third-year medical students during the 2003-2004 academic year. One format was faculty-led; the other was web-based. Skills for providing care to underserved families were taught through didactic, experiential, and service-learning curriculum components. Novel core curriculum elements included a screening tool for recognizing underserved patients and an independent clinical project through which students linked underserved families with community health resources. Analyses from 2004-2005 compared pre- and post-curriculum knowledge and attitudes of web-based students (n = 29) to those receiving either the faculty-led (n = 36) or the established "readings-only" curriculum (n = 35). Qualitative data from service learning projects were analyzed to assess clinical skills.
Compared to students in the established curriculum, both web-based and faculty-led students demonstrated improved knowledge (p < 0.001) and attitudes (p < 0.05) about caring for the underserved. Both web-based and faculty-led students were successful in recognizing and addressing underserved health issues in the clinical setting.
Faculty-led and web-based curricula can equally improve student knowledge, attitudes, and skills about caring for the underserved.
由于人口统计学、地理或经济特征等因素阻碍了获得医疗相关服务,对弱势群体健康差异的认识促使人们呼吁开发医学院课程,以解决为弱势群体提供医疗服务的问题,但关于此类课程开发和评估的报告有限。
在2003 - 2004学年为期6周的三年级医学生儿科实习期间,开发并实施了两种针对弱势群体护理的课程形式。一种形式是由教师主导;另一种是基于网络的。通过理论教学、实践和服务学习课程组件,教授为弱势群体家庭提供护理的技能。新的核心课程元素包括一种识别弱势群体患者的筛查工具和一个独立的临床项目,通过该项目学生将弱势群体家庭与社区卫生资源联系起来。2004 - 2005年的分析比较了基于网络的学生(n = 29)与接受教师主导课程(n = 36)或既定“仅阅读”课程(n = 35)的学生在课程前后的知识和态度。对服务学习项目的定性数据进行分析,以评估临床技能。
与既定课程的学生相比,基于网络和教师主导的学生在照顾弱势群体方面的知识(p < 0.001)和态度(p < 0.05)都有所改善。基于网络和教师主导的学生在临床环境中都成功识别并解决了弱势群体的健康问题。
教师主导和基于网络的课程同样可以提高学生在照顾弱势群体方面的知识、态度和技能。