Mihalic Angela P, Dobbie Alison E, Kinkade Scott
Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas, Texas 75390-9063, USA.
Acad Med. 2007 Jun;82(6):558-62. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e3180555ace.
Cultural sensitivity may be especially important in the care of children, and national pediatric associations have issued policy statements promoting cultural competence in medical education. The authors conducted a national survey to investigate the current state of cultural competence teaching and learning within U.S. pediatric clerkships.
The authors surveyed 125 U.S. pediatric clerkship directors concerning the presence or absence of cultural curricula, content, teaching methods, and evaluation. Question types were multiple-choice single/best answer, checklists, five-point Likert-type scales, and free-text responses.
Of 100 respondents (80% response rate), most agreed or strongly agreed that teaching culturally competent care is important (91%), enhances the physician/patient/family relationship (99%), and improves patient outcomes (90%). Twenty four of 98 respondents (25%) reported cultural competence teaching. The most common teaching methods were lectures (63%), experiential learning through community activities (58%), and small-group discussions (54%). Only 14 respondents reported any curricular evaluation, the commonest methods being student surveys, clinical case presentations, and standardized patient experiences. Top factors facilitating curriculum development were culturally diverse populations of patients, students, faculty, and hospital staff, and faculty interest and expertise. Top challenges included lack of protected time for program development, funding, and faculty expertise.
Few U.S. pediatric clerkships currently provide cultural competence curricula. The authors' suggestions to promote cultural competence teaching include providing faculty development opportunities and developing and disseminating teaching materials and evaluation tools. Such dissemination is important to graduate physicians, who can provide culturally sensitive pediatric care to the changing U.S. population.
文化敏感性在儿童护理中可能尤为重要,各国儿科学会已发布政策声明,倡导在医学教育中培养文化能力。作者开展了一项全国性调查,以探究美国儿科实习期间文化能力教学与学习的现状。
作者就文化课程的有无、内容、教学方法及评估,对125名美国儿科实习主任进行了调查。问题类型包括单项/最佳答案选择题、清单、五点李克特量表及自由文本回答。
在100名受访者中(回复率80%),大多数人同意或强烈同意,开展具有文化能力的护理教学很重要(91%),能加强医患/家庭关系(99%),并改善患者治疗效果(90%)。98名受访者中有24人(25%)报告了文化能力教学情况。最常用的教学方法是讲座(63%)、通过社区活动进行体验式学习(58%)以及小组讨论(54%)。只有14名受访者报告了任何课程评估情况,最常见的方法是学生调查、临床病例展示及标准化患者体验。促进课程开发的首要因素是患者、学生、教员及医院工作人员的文化多样性,以及教员的兴趣和专业知识。主要挑战包括缺乏用于项目开发的受保护时间、资金及教员专业知识。
目前美国很少有儿科实习项目提供文化能力课程。作者对促进文化能力教学的建议包括提供教员发展机会,以及开发和传播教材及评估工具。这种传播对即将毕业的医生很重要,他们能够为不断变化的美国人口提供具有文化敏感性的儿科护理。