A.S. Keuroghlian is principal investigator, National LGBTQIA+ Health Education Center, The Fenway Institute, and associate professor of psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
B.M. Charlton is associate professor, Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, and Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Acad Med. 2022 Dec 1;97(12):1786-1793. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000004867. Epub 2022 Aug 9.
Sexual and gender minority (SGM) populations face numerous health disparities. Medical school curricula lack adequate educational content preparing students for serving SGM patients, and medical students typically do not experience welcoming, inclusive educational environments conducive to learning about SGM health care.
In 2018, Harvard Medical School (HMS) launched the 3-year Sexual and Gender Minority Health Equity Initiative to integrate SGM health content throughout the longitudinal core medical curriculum and cultivate an educational climate conducive for engaging students and faculty in SGM health education. The initiative employed innovative strategies to comprehensively review existing SGM health curricular content and climate; integrate content across courses and clerkships; lead with LGBTQIA+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual, and all sexual and gender minorities) community engagement; adopt an intersectional approach that centers racial equity; cultivate safe, affirming educational environments for LGBTQIA+ and non-LGBTQIA+ students and staff; ensure all graduating students are prepared to care for SGM patients; enhance faculty knowledge, skills, attitudes, and confidence teaching SGM health; evaluate effectiveness and impact of SGM health curricular innovations; prioritize sustainability of curricular innovations; and publicly share and disseminate SGM health curricular products and tools.
Key outcomes of the initiative focused on 5 areas: development of 9 SGM health competencies, stakeholder engagement (HMS students and faculty, national SGM health experts, and LGBTQIA+ community members), student life and educational climate (increased LGBTQIA+ student matriculants, enhanced mentorship and support), curriculum development (authentic LGBTQIA+ standardized patient experiences, clerkship toolkit design), and faculty development (multimedia curriculum on content and process to teach SGM health).
In addition to refining curricular integration, evaluating interventions, and implementing comprehensive antiracist and gender-affirming educational policies, the next phase will involve dissemination by translating best practices into feasible approaches that any school can adopt to meet local needs with available resources.
性少数群体(SGM)面临着众多健康方面的差异。医学院校的课程缺乏足够的教育内容,无法为学生服务 SGM 患者做好准备,而且医学生通常无法体验到欢迎、包容的教育环境,不利于他们学习 SGM 医疗保健知识。
2018 年,哈佛医学院(HMS)启动了为期 3 年的性少数群体健康公平倡议,旨在将 SGM 健康内容纳入整个纵向核心医学课程,并营造有利于学生和教师参与 SGM 健康教育的教育氛围。该倡议采用了创新策略,全面审查现有的 SGM 健康课程内容和氛围;整合课程和实习课程的内容;以 LGBTQIA+(女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别、酷儿、双性人、无性恋和所有性和性别少数群体)社区参与为先导;采用以种族公平为中心的交叉方法;为 LGBTQIA+和非 LGBTQIA+学生和教职员工营造安全、认可的教育环境;确保所有毕业学生都能准备好照顾 SGM 患者;增强教师教授 SGM 健康方面的知识、技能、态度和信心;评估 SGM 健康课程创新的有效性和影响;优先考虑课程创新的可持续性;公开分享和传播 SGM 健康课程产品和工具。
该倡议的主要成果集中在 5 个方面:制定了 9 项 SGM 健康能力,利益相关者参与(HMS 学生和教师、国家 SGM 健康专家和 LGBTQIA+社区成员),学生生活和教育氛围(增加 LGBTQIA+学生入学人数,加强指导和支持),课程开发(真实的 LGBTQIA+标准化患者体验、实习工具包设计)和教师发展(教授 SGM 健康内容和过程的多媒体课程)。
除了完善课程整合、评估干预措施和实施全面的反种族主义和性别肯定教育政策外,下一阶段还将涉及将最佳实践转化为可行的方法,任何学校都可以采用这些方法,根据当地需求和可用资源来满足当地需求。