Del Buono Benedict C, Salhi Bisan A, Kimmel Alexis E, Santen Sally A, Jarrell Kelli L, White Melissa H, Brown Christopher K, Moll Joel L
Department of Emergency Medicine Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine Richmond Virginia USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA.
AEM Educ Train. 2022 Jun 23;6(Suppl 1):S85-S92. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10753. eCollection 2022 Jun.
Patients experiencing homelessness visit the emergency department (ED) often and have worse clinical outcomes. Caring for this patient population is complex, challenging, and resource-intensive. Emergency medicine (EM) education is lacking in formal curricula on the topic of homelessness, despite benefits for resident morale and patient care. Our goals were to identify a gap in EM education and training of the intersection of housing and health and propose educational topics and teaching methods to be included in residency curricula. Methodology was based on the development of a didactic session at the 2021 SAEM Annual Meeting. A needs assessment was performed through a review of medical education literature, a national survey of EM residency curricula, the individual curricula utilized by respective team members, and perspective from the team's own individual experiences with teaching about homelessness. Topics presented were chosen through discussion between the authors and determined to be common and relevant and cover a broad spectrum of content. The four presented topics included the intersection of COVID-19 and housing, the impact of LGBTQIA+ status on homelessness, housing status related to health system utilization and health outcomes, and housing inequity as a means of perpetuating structural racism. Suggestions for education of these topics included case-based learning, journal clubs, simulation, collaboration with social work, quality improvement projects, and engagement with community leaders. The ED is uniquely positioned to encounter the impacts of homelessness on health. Emergency physicians should be prepared to effectively care for these patients with complex social needs. Structured learning on this topic would benefit EM resident growth and lead to better patient care through improved screening, recognition of risk factors, and use of social resources.
无家可归的患者经常前往急诊科就诊,且临床结局更差。照顾这一患者群体复杂、具有挑战性且资源密集。尽管对住院医师士气和患者护理有益,但急诊医学(EM)教育在无家可归这一主题的正规课程方面存在欠缺。我们的目标是找出急诊医学教育与培训在住房与健康交叉领域的差距,并提出应纳入住院医师课程的教育主题和教学方法。方法基于在2021年SAEM年会上开展的一次教学课程。通过查阅医学教育文献、对急诊医学住院医师课程进行全国性调查、团队成员各自使用的个人课程以及团队成员自身关于无家可归教学的个人经验进行需求评估。所呈现的主题是通过作者之间的讨论选定的,被确定为常见且相关,并涵盖广泛的内容。所呈现的四个主题包括COVID-19与住房的交叉、LGBTQIA+身份对无家可归的影响、与卫生系统利用和健康结局相关的住房状况,以及住房不平等作为延续结构性种族主义的一种手段。针对这些主题的教育建议包括基于案例的学习、期刊俱乐部、模拟、与社会工作合作、质量改进项目以及与社区领袖互动。急诊科在应对无家可归对健康的影响方面具有独特地位。急诊医师应做好准备,有效护理这些有复杂社会需求的患者。关于这一主题的结构化学习将有益于急诊医学住院医师的成长,并通过改进筛查、识别风险因素和利用社会资源带来更好的患者护理。