Jellins Tennyson S, Borko Tyler L, Otero-Bell RayLee, Arnett Kelly, Saunders Scott, Poisson Sharon N, Orjuela Karen D, Salehi Omran Setareh, Jones William J, Leppert Michelle, Madera Ashley, Carlson Aaron, Pastula Daniel M, Sauer Brian M, Piquet Amanda L, Gonzales Nicole R
University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, United States of America.
Department of Neurology, Neurohospitalist & Stroke Section, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, United States of America.
J Neurol Sci. 2024 Apr 15;459:122946. doi: 10.1016/j.jns.2024.122946. Epub 2024 Mar 7.
The ability to recognize and address bias is an important communication skill not typically addressed during training. We describe the design of an educational curriculum that aims to identify and change behavior related to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). "DEI at the Bedside" uses the existing infrastructure of bedside teaching and provides a tool to normalize DEI discussions and develop skills to address bias during a neurology inpatient rotation.
As part of traditional clinical rounds, team members on an inpatient service shared experiences with DEI topics, including bias. The team developed potential responses should they encounter a similar situation in the future. We report the results of our needs assessment and curriculum development to evaluate the feasibility of incorporating a DEI educational curriculum in the neurology inpatient setting.
Forty-two DEI experiences were recorded. Medical students were the most frequent discussants (44%). Direction of bias occurred between healthcare team members (33%), against patients (31%), and patients against healthcare team members (28%). Experiences ranged from microaggressions to explicit comments of racism, sexism, and homophobia.
Based on needs assessment data, we developed a DEI educational curriculum for the inpatient neurology setting aimed to improve knowledge and skills related to DEI topics as well as to normalize conversation of DEI in the clinical setting. Additional study will demonstrate whether this initiative translates into measurable and sustained improvement in knowledge of how bias and disparity show up in the clinical setting and behavioral intent to discuss and address them.
识别和应对偏见的能力是一项重要的沟通技巧,在培训期间通常未得到重视。我们描述了一项教育课程的设计,该课程旨在识别并改变与多样性、公平和包容性(DEI)相关的行为。“床边的DEI”利用床边教学的现有基础设施,提供了一种工具,使DEI讨论常态化,并培养在神经内科住院医师轮转期间应对偏见的技能。
作为传统临床查房的一部分,住院部的团队成员分享了与DEI主题相关的经历,包括偏见。团队制定了如果未来遇到类似情况可能的应对措施。我们报告需求评估和课程开发的结果,以评估在神经内科住院环境中纳入DEI教育课程的可行性。
记录了42次DEI经历。医学生是最频繁的讨论者(44%)。偏见的方向发生在医疗团队成员之间(33%)、针对患者(31%)以及患者针对医疗团队成员(28%)。经历范围从微侵犯到明确的种族主义、性别歧视和恐同言论。
基于需求评估数据,我们为神经内科住院环境开发了一个DEI教育课程,旨在提高与DEI主题相关的知识和技能,并使临床环境中的DEI对话常态化。进一步的研究将表明,这一举措是否能转化为在临床环境中对偏见和差异的认知以及讨论和解决这些问题的行为意图方面的可衡量和持续的改善。