College of Community Health Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA.
Department of Food Science, Nutrition, & Health Promotion, College of Agriculture & Life Sciences, Mississippi State University, Starkville, Mississippi, USA.
J Rural Health. 2023 Jun;39(3):535-544. doi: 10.1111/jrh.12656. Epub 2022 Mar 8.
We sought to understand concerns fundamental to planning medical education specific to rural southern African Americans who are virtually nonexistent in American medical schools.
A diverse multidisciplinary research team conducted this qualitative study with 3 focus groups, including 17 rural medical educators recruited nationwide, 10 African American alumni of a rural medical education pipeline in Alabama, and 5 community and institutional associates of this pipeline. Analysis of recorded transcripts generated themes fitting an ecological model suggesting concerns and intervention foci at individual, community, and institutional levels.
Three major themes operating at all ecological levels were: (1) How "rural minority student" is defined, with "rural" often supplanting race to indicate minority status; (2) Multiple factors relate to rural racial minority student recruitment and success, including personal relationships with peers, mentors, and role models and supportive institutional policies and culturally competent faculty; and (3) Challenges to recruitment and retention of rural minority students, especially financial concerns and preparation for medical education.
Our findings suggest that individuals, communities, and institutions provide intervention points for planning medical education specific to southern rural African Americans. These spheres of influence project a need for partnership among communities and rural medical educators to affect broad programmatic and policy changes that address the dire shortage of rural African American health professionals to help ameliorate health inequities experienced in their home communities. It is likely that linear thinking and programming will be replaced by integrated, intertwined conceptualizations to reach this goal.
我们试图了解针对几乎不存在于美国医学院的南非裔美国农村人群的医学教育规划的基本关注点。
一个多元化的多学科研究团队进行了这项定性研究,包括全国范围内招募的 17 名农村医学教育工作者、10 名阿拉巴马农村医学教育管道的非裔美国校友以及该管道的 5 名社区和机构合作伙伴。对记录的转录本进行分析,生成适合生态模型的主题,该模型表明个人、社区和机构层面的关注点和干预重点。
在所有生态层面上运作的三个主要主题是:(1)如何定义“农村少数族裔学生”,“农村”通常取代种族来表示少数族裔身份;(2)多种因素与农村少数族裔学生的招募和成功有关,包括与同龄人、导师和榜样的个人关系以及支持性的机构政策和具有文化能力的教师;(3)农村少数族裔学生的招募和留用面临挑战,尤其是经济问题和医学教育准备。
我们的研究结果表明,个人、社区和机构为针对南非农村非裔美国人的医学教育规划提供了干预点。这些影响领域需要社区和农村医学教育工作者之间的伙伴关系,以影响广泛的计划和政策变革,解决农村非裔美国卫生专业人员严重短缺的问题,以帮助改善他们家乡社区的健康不平等现象。很可能,线性思维和编程将被综合、交织的概念所取代,以实现这一目标。