Muntinga M E, Krajenbrink V Q E, Peerdeman S M, Croiset G, Verdonk P
Department of Medical Humanities, EMGO Institute for Health and Care Research, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
VU University Medical Center School of Medical Sciences, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract. 2016 Aug;21(3):541-59. doi: 10.1007/s10459-015-9650-9. Epub 2015 Nov 24.
Recent years have seen a rise in the efforts to implement diversity topics into medical education, using either a 'narrow' or a 'broad' definition of culture. These developments urge that outcomes of such efforts are systematically evaluated by mapping the curriculum for diversity-responsive content. This study was aimed at using an intersectionality-based approach to define diversity-related learning objectives and to evaluate how biomedical and sociocultural aspects of diversity were integrated into a medical curriculum in the Netherlands. We took a three-phase mixed methods approach. In phase one and two, we defined essential learning objectives based on qualitative interviews with school stakeholders and diversity literature. In phase three, we screened the written curriculum for diversity content (culture, sex/gender and class) and related the results to learning objectives defined in phase two. We identified learning objectives in three areas of education (medical knowledge and skills, patient-physician communication, and reflexivity). Most diversity content pertained to biomedical knowledge and skills. Limited attention was paid to sociocultural issues as determinants of health and healthcare use. Intersections of culture, sex/gender and class remained mostly unaddressed. The curriculum's diversity-responsiveness could be improved by an operationalization of diversity that goes beyond biomedical traits of assumed homogeneous social groups. Future efforts to take an intersectionality-based approach to curriculum evaluations should include categories of difference other than culture, sex/gender and class as separate, equally important patient identities or groups.
近年来,将多元化主题纳入医学教育的努力有所增加,这些努力对文化采用了“狭义”或“广义”的定义。这些发展促使通过梳理课程中与多元化相关的内容,系统地评估此类努力的成果。本研究旨在采用基于交叉性的方法来定义与多元化相关的学习目标,并评估多元化的生物医学和社会文化方面如何融入荷兰的医学课程。我们采用了三阶段混合方法。在第一阶段和第二阶段,我们基于对学校利益相关者的定性访谈和多元化文献确定了基本学习目标。在第三阶段,我们筛选了书面课程中的多元化内容(文化、性别和阶级),并将结果与第二阶段确定的学习目标相关联。我们在三个教育领域(医学知识和技能、医患沟通以及反思能力)确定了学习目标。大多数多元化内容与生物医学知识和技能相关。作为健康和医疗保健使用的决定因素,社会文化问题受到的关注有限。文化、性别和阶级的交叉点大多未得到探讨。通过对多元化进行操作化定义,超越假定的同质社会群体的生物医学特征,可以提高课程对多元化的响应能力。未来采用基于交叉性的方法进行课程评估的努力应将文化、性别和阶级之外的差异类别作为单独且同等重要的患者身份或群体纳入其中。