a Harvard Medical School , Brigham and Women's Hospital , Boston , MA , USA.
b Stellenbosch University, Centre for Health Professions Education , Tygerberg , South Africa.
Med Teach. 2017 Jun;39(6):639-645. doi: 10.1080/0142159X.2017.1301654. Epub 2017 Mar 31.
Global health education (GHE) continues to be a growing initiative in many medical schools across the world. This focus is no longer limited to participants from high-income countries and has expanded to institutions and students from low- and middle-income settings. With this shift has come a need to develop meaningful curricula through engagement between educators and learners who represent the sending institutions and the diverse settings in which GHE takes place. The Bellagio Global Health Education Initiative (BGHEI) was founded to create a space for such debate and discussion and to generate guidelines towards a universal curriculum for global health. In this article, we describe the development and process of our work and outline six overarching principles that ought to be considered when adopting an inclusive approach to GHE curriculum development.
全球健康教育(GHE)在世界上许多医学院校中不断发展壮大。这种关注不再局限于高收入国家的参与者,已经扩展到来自低收入和中等收入国家的机构和学生。随着这种转变,需要通过来自派遣机构和 GHE 开展所在多样化环境的教育者和学习者之间的互动,来制定有意义的课程。贝里雅格全球健康教育倡议(BGHEI)的成立是为了为这种辩论和讨论创造空间,并为全球健康通用课程制定指导方针。在本文中,我们描述了我们工作的发展和过程,并概述了在采用包容性方法制定 GHE 课程时应考虑的六个总体原则。