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面向医学生的本土健康课程的开发。

The Development of an Indigenous Health Curriculum for Medical Students.

作者信息

Lewis Melissa, Prunuske Amy

机构信息

M. Lewis is assistant professor, Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri.A. Prunuske is associate professor, Department of Microbiology and Medical Genetics, Medical College of Wisconsin-Central Wisconsin Campus, Wausau, Wisconsin.

出版信息

Acad Med. 2017 May;92(5):641-648. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001482.

Abstract

Indigenous populations experience dramatic health disparities; yet, few medical schools equip students with the skills to address these inequities. At the University of Minnesota Medical School, Duluth campus, a project to develop an Indigenous health curriculum began in September 2013. This project used collaborative and decolonizing methods to gather ideas and opinions from multiple stakeholders, including students, community members, faculty, and administration, to guide the process of adding Indigenous health content to the curriculum to prepare students to work effectively with Indigenous populations. A mixed-methods needs assessment was implemented to inform the instructional design of the curriculum. In June 2014, stakeholders were invited to attend a retreat and complete a survey to understand their opinions of what should be included in the curriculum and in what way. Retreat feedback and survey responses indicated that the most important topics to include were cultural humility, Indigenous culture, social/political/economic determinants of health, and successful tribal health interventions. Stakeholders also emphasized that this content should be taught by tribal members, medical school faculty, and faculty in complementary departments (e.g., American Indian Studies, Education, Social Work) in a way that incorporates experiential learning.Preliminary outcomes include the addition of a seven-hour block of Indigenous content for first-year students taught primarily by Indigenous faculty from several departments. To address the systemic barriers to health and well-being and provider bias that Indigenous patients experience, this project sought to gather data and opinions regarding the training of medical students through a process of Indigenizing research and education.

摘要

原住民群体面临着巨大的健康差距;然而,很少有医学院校让学生具备应对这些不平等问题的技能。在明尼苏达大学医学院德卢斯校区,一个开发原住民健康课程的项目于2013年9月启动。该项目采用合作和解殖民化的方法,从包括学生、社区成员、教师和管理人员在内的多个利益相关者那里收集想法和意见,以指导在课程中添加原住民健康内容的过程,使学生能够有效地与原住民群体合作。实施了一项混合方法需求评估,以为课程的教学设计提供信息。2014年6月,邀请利益相关者参加一次务虚会并完成一项调查,以了解他们对课程应包括哪些内容以及以何种方式呈现的看法。务虚会反馈和调查回复表明,最重要的主题包括文化谦逊、原住民文化、健康的社会/政治/经济决定因素以及成功的部落健康干预措施。利益相关者还强调,这些内容应由部落成员、医学院教师以及相关互补系(如美洲印第安人研究、教育、社会工作)的教师以融入体验式学习的方式进行教授。初步成果包括为一年级学生增加了一个由几个系的原住民教师主讲的七小时原住民内容板块。为了解决原住民患者所经历的健康和福祉方面的系统性障碍以及医疗服务提供者的偏见,该项目试图通过将研究和教育本土化的过程,收集有关医学生培训的数据和意见。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/e163/5402707/465bbdda469c/acm-92-641-g004.jpg

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