Northern Ontario School of Medicine University in Sudbury, 935 Ramsey Lake Rd, Sudbury, ON, P3E 2C6, Canada.
Northern Ontario School of Medicine University in Thunder Bay, 955 Oliver Rd, Thunder Bay, P7B 5E1, Canada.
BMC Med Educ. 2023 Jun 20;23(1):456. doi: 10.1186/s12909-023-04434-7.
The novel coronavirus, COVID-19, emerged in December 2019. Shortly after, vaccines against the virus were distributed in Canada for public use, but the remoteness of many northern Indigenous communities in Ontario posed a challenge for vaccine distribution and dissemination. The Ministry of Health partnered with the Northern Ontario School of Medicine University (NOSMU) and the air ambulance service, Ornge, to assist in delivering the vaccination doses to 31 fly-in communities in the Nishnawbe Aski Nation and Moosonee, all within Ontario. These deployments were considered "service-learning electives" for Undergraduate and Postgraduate medical learners from NOSMU who joined the operation in two-week deployments. NOSMU is renowned for its social accountability mandate and gives its medical learners opportunities to participate in service-learning to enhance their medical skills and cultural sensitivity. The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between social accountability and medical learners' experiences during a service-learning elective in northern Indigenous communities in Ontario during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Data were collected through a planned post-placement activity completed by eighteen Undergraduate and Postgraduate medical learners, who participated in the vaccine deployment. The activity consisted of a 500-word reflective response passage. Thematic analysis was used to identify, analyze, and report the themes within the collected data.
Two themes were identified by the authors, which formed a concise overview of the collected data: (1) confronting the realities of working in Indigenous communities; and (2) service-learning as a path to social accountability.
These vaccine deployments were an opportunity for medical learners to engage in service-learning and engage with Indigenous communities in Northern Ontario. Service-learning is an exceptional method which provides an opportunity to expand knowledge on the social determinants of health, social justice, and social accountability. The medical learners in this study reiterated the idea that learning medicine through a service-learning model leads to a greater depth of knowledge on Indigenous health and culture, and enhances medical knowledge compared to classroom learning.
新型冠状病毒(COVID-19)于 2019 年 12 月出现。不久之后,加拿大开始分发针对该病毒的疫苗供公众使用,但安大略省许多北部原住民社区地处偏远,这给疫苗的分发和传播带来了挑战。安大略省卫生部与北方安大略医学院大学(NOSMU)和空中救护服务公司 Ornge 合作,协助将疫苗剂量送到安大略省的 Nishnawbe Aski 民族和穆索尼的 31 个飞地社区。这些部署被认为是 NOSMU 的本科生和研究生医学学习者的“服务学习选修课”,他们以两周的部署加入了这项行动。NOSMU 以其社会责任使命而闻名,为医学学习者提供参与服务学习的机会,以提高他们的医疗技能和文化敏感性。本研究旨在探讨在 COVID-19 大流行期间,在安大略省北部原住民社区进行服务学习选修课时,社会责任与医学学习者经历之间的关系。
通过由 18 名本科生和研究生医学学习者完成的计划中的安置后活动收集数据,他们参加了疫苗部署。该活动包括 500 字的反思性反应段落。使用主题分析来识别、分析和报告收集数据中的主题。
作者确定了两个主题,它们形成了对收集数据的简洁概述:(1)面对在原住民社区工作的现实;(2)服务学习是社会责任的途径。
这些疫苗部署为医学学习者提供了参与服务学习并与安大略省北部的原住民社区互动的机会。服务学习是一种极好的方法,提供了一个扩展对健康的社会决定因素、社会正义和社会责任的知识的机会。本研究中的医学学习者重申了通过服务学习模式学习医学可以更深入地了解原住民健康和文化,并增强医学知识的观点,而不是通过课堂学习。