Dr. Okoro is from the Transitional Year Residency Program, Dwight D. Eisenhower Army Medical Center, Fort Gordon, Georgia. Drs. Chau, Kawaoka, and Quereshi are from the Department of Dermatology, Warren Alpert Medical School, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. Dr. Wong is from the Department of Dermatology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Cutis. 2021 Oct;108(4):204-209. doi: 10.12788/cutis.0362.
Disease presentations can vary between different skin phototypes, at times requiring distinct management and therapies. Medical education curricula have yet to be updated to better reflect and address the dermatologic needs of an increasingly diverse population. The objective of this study was to determine if the preclinical dermatology curriculum at 3 US medical schools provided adequate representation of skin of color patients in their didactic presentation slides. Three US medical schools-all members of the American Medical Association (AMA) Accelerating Change in Medical Education consortium-were included in the study. The institutions were a blend of private and public schools located across different geographic boundaries. The main outcome measures included the proportion of total skin of color photographs for each institution, the number of priority conditions for skin of color patients, and the discussion of differences between skin types. The results strongly suggested that skin of color is underrepresented in the preclinical dermatology curriculum at all 3 institutions. Efforts should be made to increase images and discussion of skin of color in preclinical didactics.
疾病表现可能因不同的皮肤光型而有所不同,有时需要不同的管理和治疗方法。医学教育课程尚未更新,以更好地反映和满足日益多样化人群的皮肤科需求。本研究的目的是确定美国 3 所医学院的临床前皮肤科课程在其教学幻灯片中是否充分体现了有色人种患者的皮肤。这项研究纳入了美国医学协会(AMA)加速医学教育变革联盟的 3 所美国医学院。这些机构既有私立学校也有公立学校,分布在不同的地理区域。主要观察指标包括每个机构的有色人种皮肤照片总数的比例、有色人种患者的优先病种数量以及不同皮肤类型之间差异的讨论。研究结果强烈表明,所有 3 所机构的临床前皮肤科课程都严重缺乏对有色人种皮肤的代表性。应该努力增加临床前教学中对有色人种皮肤的图片和讨论。