Castillo Jonathan, Goldenhar Linda M, Baker Raymond C, Kahn Robert S, Dewitt Thomas G
J Grad Med Educ. 2010 Sep;2(3):449-55. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-10-00081.1.
Resident interest in global health care training is growing and has been shown to have a positive effect on participants' clinical skills and cultural competency. In addition, it is associated with career choices in primary care, public health, and in the service of underserved populations. The purpose of this study was to explore, through reflective practice, how participation in a formal global health training program influences pediatric residents' perspectives when caring for diverse patient populations.
Thirteen pediatric and combined-program residents enrolled in a year-long Global Health Scholars Program at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center during the 2007-2008 academic year. Educational interventions included a written curriculum, a lecture series, one-on-one mentoring sessions, an experience abroad, and reflective journaling assignments. The American Society for Tropical Medicine and Hygiene global health competencies were used as an a priori coding framework to qualitatively analyze the reflective journal entries of the residents.
Four themes emerged from the coded journal passages from all 13 residents: (1) the burden of global disease, as a heightened awareness of the diseases that affect humans worldwide; (2) immigrant/underserved health, reflected in a desire to apply lessons learned abroad at home to provide more culturally effective care to immigrant patients in the United States; (3) parenting, or observed parental, longing to assure that their children receive health care; and (4) humanitarianism, expressed as the desire to volunteer in future humanitarian health efforts in the United States and abroad.
Our findings suggest that participating in a global health training program helped residents begin to acquire competence in the American Society for Tropical Medicine and Hygiene competency domains. Such training also may strengthen residents' acquisition of professional skills, including the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education competencies.
住院医师对全球卫生保健培训的兴趣日益浓厚,且已证明这对参与者的临床技能和文化能力有积极影响。此外,它还与初级保健、公共卫生以及为服务不足人群提供服务的职业选择相关。本研究的目的是通过反思性实践,探讨参与正式的全球卫生培训项目如何影响儿科住院医师在照顾不同患者群体时的观点。
2007 - 2008学年,13名儿科及联合项目住院医师参加了辛辛那提儿童医院医疗中心为期一年的全球卫生学者项目。教育干预措施包括书面课程、系列讲座、一对一辅导课程、国外经历以及反思性日记作业。美国热带医学和卫生学会的全球卫生能力被用作先验编码框架,对住院医师的反思性日记条目进行定性分析。
对所有13名住院医师编码后的日记段落出现了四个主题:(1)全球疾病负担,表现为对影响全球人类的疾病的更高认识;(2)移民/服务不足人群的健康,体现为希望将在国外学到的经验应用于国内,为美国的移民患者提供更具文化适应性的护理;(3)育儿,或观察到的父母渴望确保其子女获得医疗保健;(4)人道主义,表现为希望在美国和国外未来的人道主义卫生工作中志愿服务。
我们的研究结果表明,参与全球卫生培训项目有助于住院医师开始在美国热带医学和卫生学会的能力领域获得能力。此类培训还可能加强住院医师对专业技能的掌握,包括研究生医学教育认证委员会的能力要求。