Faculty of Medicine (Mathieu, Akinbobola, Shipeolu, Crosse), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.; Department of Psychiatry (Mathieu), Queen's University, Kingston, Ont.; Department of Family Medicine (Fotsing) and Faculty of Medicine (Fotsing, Denis-LeBlanc), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.; Royal Columbian Hospital (Akinbobola), New Westminster, BC; Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology (Shipeolu), Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; Department of Psychiatry (Crosse), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont.; Faculty of Medicine (Thomas), University of British Columbia; Black Medical Students' Association of Canada (Thomas), Vancouver, BC; Institut du Savoir Montfort (Denis-LeBlanc); School of Sociological and Anthropological Studies (Gueye), University of Ottawa; Department of Family Medicine (Bekolo), Montfort Hospital; Department of Undergraduate Medical Education (Bekolo), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.
CMAJ Open. 2022 Oct 23;10(4):E937-E944. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20220192. Print 2022 Oct-Dec.
Black medical students have been consistently underrepresented in Canadian medical schools, and data on the impact of discrimination on their medical education remain limited. In this cross-sectional study, we aimed to investigate the experiences of Black medical students through the Black Medical Students' Association of Canada (BMSAC).
We developed a 63-item instrument around the domains of inclusion and diversity, wellness, discrimination, career advancement and diversity in medical education. The anonymous web-based questionnaire was sent to 128 medical students and first-year residents from all 17 Canadian medical schools via the BMSAC listserv. We obtained frequencies for demographic data and self-reported experiences.
We received 52 responses. Of respondents, 59% had at least 1 personal encounter with discrimination in medical school. Discrimination was experienced in both clinical and academic contexts, notably from patients, peers and hospital staff. Students further along in their medical training were more likely to endorse having experienced discrimination in medical school. Most respondents had positive experiences with academic and clinical inclusion, as well as resiliency in the face of discrimination. However, most respondents had negative experiences relating to reporting discrimination, their well-being, career advancement, sentiments of minority tax and low diversity in medical education.
We found that discrimination has important implications on the learning experiences of Black medical students surveyed from the BMSAC. This directly challenges the notion that Canadian medical schools are impervious to racism and highlights the need for advocacy and systemic changes to eliminate institutional racism.
在加拿大的医学院中,黑人医学生的人数一直不足,关于歧视对他们医学教育的影响的数据仍然有限。在这项横断面研究中,我们旨在通过加拿大黑人医学生协会(BMSAC)来调查黑人医学生的经历。
我们围绕包容与多样性、健康、歧视、职业发展以及医学教育中的多样性等领域,制定了一份包含 63 个条目的问卷。这份匿名的网络问卷通过 BMSAC 的邮件列表发送给了来自加拿大 17 所医学院的 128 名医学生和一年级住院医师。我们获取了人口统计学数据和自我报告经历的频率。
我们收到了 52 份回复。在受访者中,59%的人在医学院至少有过一次与歧视有关的个人遭遇。歧视发生在临床和学术环境中,特别是来自患者、同行和医院工作人员。在医学培训中处于更高级阶段的学生更有可能承认在医学院经历过歧视。大多数受访者对学术和临床包容以及在面对歧视时的韧性有积极的体验。然而,大多数受访者在报告歧视、他们的幸福感、职业发展、少数群体税和医学教育中多样性低等方面有负面体验。
我们发现,歧视对 BMSAC 调查的黑人医学生的学习经历有重要影响。这直接挑战了加拿大医学院不受种族主义影响的观点,并强调了倡导和系统变革以消除制度性种族主义的必要性。