Boston Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
University of Vermont, Larner College of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont.
West J Emerg Med. 2023 Nov;24(6):1094-1103. doi: 10.5811/westjem.59797.
Our aim was to implement and evaluate a novel social determinants of health (SDoH) curriculum into the required fourth-year emergency medicine (EM) course at the University of Vermont Larner College of Medicine with the goal to teach students how to assess and address SDoH in clinical practice. The objectives were as follows: 1. Assess the SDoH, risk factors, and barriers to healthcare facing patients from diverse socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds in the ED. 2. Examine how social work consult services operate in the ED setting and how to identify appropriate referrals, resources, and treatment plans for patients in the ED. 3. Examine and interpret the impact health disparities have on patients in the ED and develop potential solutions to reduce these disparities to improve health outcomes. 4. Analyze the experiences and lessons learned and use them to inform future patient interactions.
The curriculum was developed by a workgroup that considered the following: scope; target learners; overall structure; instructional and delivery methods; and session scheduling. The curriculum consisted of four components that took place over the four-week EM course. Students completed a required end-of-course survey. Survey results underwent a mixed-methods analysis to assess student attitudes and the impact of the curriculum.
IMPACT/EFFECTIVENESS: We received a 78.7% (74/94) completion rate for the 2021-2022 academic year. Of all respondents, 92% (68/74) indicated that they would apply lessons learned from the SDoH components of the curriculum; 74% (54/74) rated the SDoH curriculum as good, very good, or excellent; and 81% (60/74) felt that the EM course increased their understanding of diversity, equity, and inclusion as it relates to the practice of medicine. The thematic analyses revealed four main themes: 1) general comments; 2) course design; 3) interprofessional collaboration; and 4) expanding the scope of the curriculum.
Social medicine integration into core EM courses is a generalizable approach to experiential and collaborative exposure to the social determinants of health. Of student respondents, 92% indicated they will use lessons learned from this curriculum in their future practice. This can improve the way future generations of physicians identify SDoH and address the social needs that affect their patients, thereby advancing and promoting health equity.
我们的目标是在佛蒙特大学拉纳医学院的第四年急诊医学(EM)课程中实施和评估一项新的社会决定因素健康(SDoH)课程,旨在教授学生如何在临床实践中评估和解决 SDoH。目标如下:1. 评估来自不同社会经济和文化背景的 ED 患者的 SDoH、风险因素和医疗保健障碍。2. 研究社会工作人员如何在 ED 环境中运作以及如何为 ED 患者识别适当的转介、资源和治疗计划。3. 研究和解释健康差距对 ED 患者的影响,并制定潜在的解决方案以减少这些差距,从而改善健康结果。4. 分析经验和教训,并将其用于指导未来的患者互动。
该课程由一个工作组开发,考虑了以下因素:范围;目标学习者;整体结构;教学和交付方法;以及课程安排。该课程由四个部分组成,在四门 EM 课程中进行。学生完成了一门必修的课程结束后调查。调查结果采用混合方法分析,以评估学生的态度和课程的影响。
影响/有效性:我们在 2021-2022 学年获得了 78.7%(74/94)的完成率。在所有回答者中,92%(68/74)表示他们将应用 SDoH 课程的课程内容;74%(54/74)认为 SDoH 课程良好、非常好或极好;81%(60/74)认为 EM 课程增加了他们对多样性、公平性和包容性的理解,因为它与医学实践有关。主题分析揭示了四个主要主题:1)一般意见;2)课程设计;3)跨专业合作;4)扩大课程范围。
将社会医学纳入核心 EM 课程是一种可推广的方法,可以让学生体验和合作接触健康的社会决定因素。在学生受访者中,92%表示他们将在未来的实践中使用从本课程中学到的经验。这可以改善未来几代医生识别 SDoH 并解决影响他们患者的社会需求的方式,从而推进和促进健康公平。