Rattani Abbas, Mian Zoha, Farahani Shagayeg, Ridge Margaret, Uzamere Theodore, Bajwa Moazzum
Department of Radiation Oncology, Tufts Medical Center, 800 Washington St., Boston, MA 02111, United States of America.
University of Louisville School of Medicine, A Building, Suite 110, 500 S. Preston Street, Louisville, KY 40204, United States of America.
J Natl Med Assoc. 2024 Apr;116(2 Pt 1):95-118. doi: 10.1016/j.jnma.2023.09.011. Epub 2024 Jan 24.
Among the various etiologies of the exclusion of Black male physicians from the healthcare workforce, it is critical to identify and examine the barriers in their trajectory. Given that most medical school matriculants graduate and pursue residency training, medical school admission has been identified as the primary impediment to a career in medicine. Thus, this work aims to identify barriers in the journey of primarily Black, and secondarily underrepresented minority, premedical students. A systematic review of the medical literature was conducted for articles pertaining to the undergraduate/premedical period, Black experiences, and the medical school application process. The search yielded 5336 results, and 13 articles were included. Most papers corroborated common barriers, such as financial/socioeconomic burdens, lack of access to preparatory materials and academic enrichment programs, lack of exposure to the medical field, poor mentorship/advising experiences, systemic and interpersonal racism, and limited support systems. Common facilitators of interest and interventions included increasing academic enrichment programs, improving mentorship and career guidance quality and availability, and improving access to and availability of resources as well as exposure opportunities. No article explicitly discussed addressing racism. There is a dearth of studies exploring the premedical stage-the penultimate point of entry into medicine. Though interest in becoming a physician may be present, multiple and disparate impediments restrict Black men's participation in medicine. Addressing the barriers Black and underrepresented minority premedical students face requires an awareness of how multiple systems work together to discriminate and restrict access to careers in medicine beyond the traditional pipeline understanding.
在导致黑人男医生被排除在医疗劳动力队伍之外的各种病因中,识别并审视他们发展轨迹中的障碍至关重要。鉴于大多数医学院录取的学生毕业后会继续接受住院医师培训,医学院入学已被确定为医学职业的主要障碍。因此,这项工作旨在识别主要为黑人以及其次为代表性不足的少数族裔的医学预科学生在求学过程中面临的障碍。我们对医学文献进行了系统回顾,以查找与本科/医学预科阶段、黑人经历以及医学院申请流程相关的文章。搜索结果有5336条,纳入了13篇文章。大多数论文证实了一些常见障碍,比如经济/社会经济负担、难以获取备考材料和学术强化项目、缺乏医学领域的接触机会、糟糕的导师指导/咨询经历、系统性和人际间的种族主义以及有限的支持系统。常见的促进因素和干预措施包括增加学术强化项目、提高导师指导和职业指导的质量与可及性、改善资源的获取和可及性以及接触机会。没有文章明确讨论应对种族主义的问题。探索医学预科阶段(进入医学领域的倒数第二个阶段)的研究匮乏。尽管可能存在成为医生的兴趣,但多重且各异的障碍限制了黑人男性从事医学工作。应对黑人和代表性不足的少数族裔医学预科学生面临的障碍,需要认识到多个系统如何共同作用,以歧视并限制他们进入医学职业,而不仅仅是基于传统途径的理解。