is Research Coordinator, New York University (NYU) Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
is Research Manager, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
J Grad Med Educ. 2024 Apr;16(2):182-194. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-23-00573.1. Epub 2024 Apr 15.
Residents lack confidence in caring for transgender individuals. More exposure and practice throughout training is needed. To explore whether and how prior exposure to transgender health skills during medical school impacted competency with these skills during residency. In 2022, all 101 internal medicine residents at New York University Grossman School of Medicine participated in an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) station as part of their annual formative assessment where they cared for a standardized patient (SP) who identified as transgender. Three SPs who were members of the transgender community were recruited through online and social media forums. Two resident groups (continuum vs noncontinuum) differed in their prior experiences with transgender OSCEs during medical school. We analyzed SPs' ratings of resident performance using checklist data and SP open-ended feedback to compare performance between groups and resident post-OSCE evaluations to understand residents' perceptions of the educational value of the case. Residents with prior experience with transgender SPs (continuum) were more frequently recommended by SPs (88% [21 of 24] vs 70% [54 of 77]) to a family member or friend, were all rated professional (100% [24 of 24] vs 94% [72 of 94]) and scored better in pain information-gathering (92% vs 65%, mean summary score) and gender-affirming care skills (67% vs 52%, mean summary score). Noncontinuum residents lacked experience, missed opportunities to ask about gender identity, and needed work on demonstrating comfort and using proper language. Most residents completing a post-OSCE evaluation (80%, 41 of 51) rated the case as "very valuable." Spaced practice and feedback through early exposure to transgender OSCEs were valuable for skill acquisition, giving continuum residents a learning advantage compared to noncontinuum residents.
住院医师对照顾跨性别者缺乏信心。在培训过程中需要更多的接触和实践。 探讨医学生阶段接触跨性别健康技能的情况,以及这些技能在住院医师阶段的掌握情况。 2022 年,纽约大学格罗斯曼医学院的 101 名内科住院医师都参加了一项客观结构化临床考试(OSCE)站,作为他们年度形成性评估的一部分,在该考试中,他们照顾了一名被认定为跨性别的标准化患者(SP)。通过在线和社交媒体论坛,招募了 3 名跨性别社区成员担任 SP。两组住院医师(连续组与非连续组)在医学生阶段接受跨性别 OSCE 的经验不同。我们使用清单数据和 SP 开放式反馈来分析 SP 对住院医师表现的评分,以比较两组之间的表现和住院医师 OSCE 后的评估,了解住院医师对该案例教育价值的看法。 有过跨性别 SP 经验的住院医师(连续组)更常被 SP 推荐给家人或朋友(88%[24 名中的 21 名]比 70%[77 名中的 54 名]),他们都被评为专业(100%[24 名中的 24 名]比 94%[94 名中的 72 名]),并且在疼痛信息收集(92%比 65%,平均综合评分)和性别肯定护理技能(67%比 52%,平均综合评分)方面得分更高。非连续组的住院医师缺乏经验,错过了询问性别认同的机会,需要努力展示舒适感和使用正确的语言。大多数完成 OSCE 后评估的住院医师(80%,51 名中的 41 名)认为该案例“非常有价值”。 通过早期接触跨性别 OSCE 进行间隔练习和反馈对于技能获取很有价值,与非连续组的住院医师相比,连续组的住院医师具有学习优势。