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与原住民动画师共同创建医学教育课程中的文化安全实践:一个原住民学习圈的成果

Culturally Safe Practices in the Co-creation of Medical Education Curriculum with Indigenous Animators: Outcomes From an Indigenous Learning Circle.

作者信息

Bessette Nicole, Reade Maurianne, McGregor Lorrilee, Berti Joahnna, Naokwegijig Bruce, Maar Marion

机构信息

Undergraduate Medical Education, Northern Ontario School of Medicine University, Sudbury, ON, Canada.

Faculty of Medicine, Northern Ontario School of Medicine University, Sudbury, ON, Canada.

出版信息

J Med Educ Curric Dev. 2023 Dec 15;10:23821205231219430. doi: 10.1177/23821205231219430. eCollection 2023 Jan-Dec.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

To explore the experiences of Indigenous patient actors who co-created and enacted Indigenous patient scenarios in collaboration with medical school faculty. We critically examine the structures and systems in a medical school that mediate cultural safety for Indigenous patient actors. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada has called on medical schools and healthcare institutions to help address the intergenerational harms inflicted on Indigenous people by the Indian residential school (IRS) system. Institutions are striving to incorporate cultural competency, conflict resolution, human rights, and anti-racism education into their curricula. However, the structural inequities within undergraduate, postgraduate, and continuing medical education practices must be identified and challenged to ensure that medical education is authentic and culturally safe for those involved in the development and delivery of the Indigenous health curriculum. To explore potential structural inequities in the co-creation process of simulated cultural communication scenarios (SCCS), the Indigenous animators at Debajehmujig Storytellers and collaborating faculty and professional staff at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine University (NOSM U) examined cultural safety in their curriculum design and delivery process.

METHODS

We utilized the qualitative Indigenous research methodology of the Learning Circle to deconstruct the co-creation process and to explore the experience of cultural safety from the Indigenous animators' perspective throughout the curriculum design and delivery process.

RESULTS

A framework for culturally safe co-creation practices with Indigenous people, rooted within Indigenous teachings of the Medicine Wheel, emerged from the qualitative data.

CONCLUSIONS

This framework has the potential to guide the practice of culturally safe co-creation of Indigenous patient simulations in medical education and healthcare workplace learning. While the Medicine Wheel teachings are held by specific Indigenous nations, we anticipate that the results and recommendations of this study will apply to Indigenous co-creators and academic medical educators internationally.

摘要

目标

探讨与医学院教师合作共同创作并演绎原住民患者情景的原住民患者演员的经历。我们批判性地审视医学院中调节原住民患者演员文化安全的结构和系统。加拿大真相与和解委员会呼吁医学院和医疗机构帮助解决印第安寄宿学校(IRS)系统对原住民造成的代际伤害。各机构正努力将文化能力、冲突解决、人权和反种族主义教育纳入其课程。然而,必须识别并挑战本科、研究生和继续医学教育实践中的结构性不平等,以确保医学教育对参与原住民健康课程开发和授课的人员而言是真实且具有文化安全性的。为了探索模拟文化交流情景(SCCS)共同创作过程中潜在的结构性不平等,德巴耶穆吉格故事讲述者组织的原住民动画师以及安大略省北部医学院大学(NOSM U)的合作教师和专业工作人员在其课程设计和授课过程中审视了文化安全问题。

方法

我们运用学习圈的定性原住民研究方法来解构共同创作过程,并从原住民动画师的角度在整个课程设计和授课过程中探索文化安全体验。

结果

从定性数据中得出了一个基于药轮原住民教义的与原住民进行文化安全共同创作实践的框架。

结论

该框架有潜力指导医学教育和医疗工作场所学习中与原住民患者模拟进行文化安全共同创作的实践。虽然药轮教义为特定的原住民民族所持有,但我们预计本研究的结果和建议将适用于国际上的原住民共同创作者和学术医学教育工作者。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/dd9e/10725153/5b9b60ca525c/10.1177_23821205231219430-fig1.jpg

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