Holden Lynne, Rumala Bernice, Carson Patricia, Siegel Elliot
Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Montefiore Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA ; Mentoring in Medicine, Inc., Bronx, NY, USA.
Mentoring in Medicine, Inc., Bronx, NY, USA.
Inf Serv Use. 2014 Jan 1;34(3-4):355-366. doi: 10.3233/ISU-140761.
There are many obstacles that urban youth experience in pursuing health careers, but the benefits of diversifying the classroom and workforce are clear. This is especially true today as educators and policymakers seek to enhance underrepresented minority students' access to health careers, and also achieve the health workforce needed to support the Affordable Care Act. The creation of student pipeline programs began more than 40 years ago, but success has been equivocal. In 2008, Mentoring in Medicine (MIM) conducted a research project to identify how students learn about health careers; develop strategies for an integrated, experiential learning program that encourages underrepresented minority students to pursue careers in health; and translate these into best practices for supporting students through their entire preparatory journey. Six focus groups were conducted with educators, students, and their parents. The inclusion of parents was unusual in studies of this kind. The outcome yielded important and surprising differences between student and parent knowledge, attitudes and beliefs. They informed our understanding of the factors that motivate and deter underrepresented minority students to pursue careers in health care. Specific programmatic strategies emerged that found their place in the subsequent development of new MIM programming that falls into the following three categories: community-based, school-based and Internet based. Best practices derived from these MIM programs are summarized and offered for consideration by other health career education program developers targeting underrepresented minority students, particularly those located in urban settings.
城市青年在追求健康职业的过程中面临诸多障碍,但实现课堂多元化和劳动力多元化的益处是显而易见的。如今尤其如此,因为教育工作者和政策制定者试图增加少数族裔学生从事健康职业的机会,同时打造支持《平价医疗法案》所需的健康劳动力队伍。学生输送计划始于40多年前,但成效并不显著。2008年,医学指导(MIM)开展了一项研究项目,旨在确定学生如何了解健康职业;制定一个综合体验式学习项目的策略,鼓励少数族裔学生从事健康职业;并将这些策略转化为在学生整个准备过程中支持他们的最佳实践。与教育工作者、学生及其家长进行了六个焦点小组讨论。在这类研究中纳入家长是不同寻常的。结果显示,学生与家长在知识、态度和信念方面存在重要且惊人的差异。这些差异让我们了解到激励和阻碍少数族裔学生从事医疗保健职业的因素。由此产生了具体的项目策略,并在随后新的MIM项目开发中得以应用,这些项目分为以下三类:基于社区的、基于学校的和基于互联网的。本文总结了从这些MIM项目中得出的最佳实践,供其他针对少数族裔学生,特别是城市地区少数族裔学生的健康职业教育项目开发者参考。