Department of Education, Innovation, Technology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
J Community Health. 2021 Dec;46(6):1204-1212. doi: 10.1007/s10900-021-01009-9. Epub 2021 Jun 9.
Public health crises require individuals, often volunteers, to help minimize disasters. The COVID-19 pandemic required such activation of individuals, but little is known about medical students' preferences of such engagement. We investigated potential variations in medical students' educational preferences, attitudes, and volunteerism during the COVID-19 pandemic based on socio-demographics to better prepare for future activation scenarios. A web-based, anonymous survey of U.S. medical students at a single institution was conducted in May 2020. Across four training year, 518 (68% response rate) students completed the survey. During the pandemic, 42.3% (n = 215) wanted to discontinue in-person clinical experiences, 32.3% (n = 164) wanted to continue, and 25.4% (n = 129) were neutral. There was no gender effect for engagement in volunteer activities or preference to engage in clinical activities during the pandemic. However, second-year (n = 59, 11.6%) and third-year students (n = 58, 11.4%) wanted to continue in-person clinical experiences at a greater proportion than expected, while a small proportion of fourth-year students (n = 17, 3.3%) wanted to continue, χ(6) = 43.48, p < .001, φ = 0.29. Majority of respondents (n = 287, 55.5%) volunteered in clinical and non-clinical settings. A lower proportion of fourth-year (n = 12, 2.3%) and first-year students (n = 50, 9.7%) volunteered than expected. Likelihood to volunteer during a pandemic varied by gender, training year, and/or prior experience with disaster event depending on the type of volunteer-site setting. Our findings suggest socio-demographic factors may impact medical student engagement and volunteerism during a public health crisis. Educational leadership should be sensitive to such variations and can facilitate volunteer activities that allow student engagement during future pandemics.
公共卫生危机需要个人,通常是志愿者,来帮助最小化灾难。COVID-19 大流行需要个人这样的激活,但对于医学生对这种参与的偏好知之甚少。我们根据社会人口统计学研究了 COVID-19 大流行期间医学生教育偏好、态度和志愿服务的潜在变化,以便更好地为未来的激活场景做好准备。2020 年 5 月,我们对一所美国医学院校的医学生进行了一项基于网络的匿名调查。在四个培训年级中,有 518 名(68%的回复率)学生完成了调查。在大流行期间,42.3%(n=215)的学生希望停止面对面的临床经验,32.3%(n=164)的学生希望继续,25.4%(n=129)的学生持中立态度。在参与志愿活动或在大流行期间参与临床活动的意愿方面,没有性别差异。然而,二年级(n=59,11.6%)和三年级(n=58,11.4%)的学生比预期更希望继续进行面对面的临床经验,而四年级(n=17,3.3%)的学生中只有一小部分希望继续进行临床经验,χ(6)=43.48,p<.001,φ=0.29。大多数受访者(n=287,55.5%)在临床和非临床环境中自愿服务。第四年级(n=12,2.3%)和一年级学生(n=50,9.7%)的自愿服务比例低于预期。在大流行期间自愿服务的可能性因性别、培训年级和/或以前是否经历过灾害事件而异,具体取决于志愿场所的类型。我们的研究结果表明,社会人口统计学因素可能会影响医学生在公共卫生危机期间的参与和志愿服务。教育领导应该对这些差异敏感,并可以促进志愿者活动,使学生在未来的大流行期间能够参与。