Poitevien Patricia, Kas-Osoka Oriaku, Burns Audrea, Prakash Laura Kester, Marbin Jyothi, Schwartz Alan, Lucas Candice Taylor, Yemane Lahia, Blankenburg Rebecca
Department of Pediatrics, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences/Arkansas Children's Hospital, Little Rock, Arkansas, USA.
Med Educ. 2025 Jun;59(6):630-639. doi: 10.1111/medu.15546. Epub 2024 Sep 24.
Sense of belonging supports academic achievement and encourages career endurance. The purpose of this study was to characterize what individual and institutional factors influence one's sense of belonging by describing the experiences of underrepresented in medicine (UIM) paediatric and internal medicine-paediatric residents in the United States.
The authors conducted a national survey of paediatric and internal medicine-paediatric residents. The 23-item anonymous web-based survey was distributed between October 2020 and January 2021 and included questions on socio-demographic characteristics and individual perceptions on sense of belonging, value, common mission or values at a program or institution and respect. The authors used linear mixed models and fitted regression models to examine individual factors and environmental factors that impact sense of belonging, value and respect.
Across 29 residency programs, 938 (53%) of 1748 residents completed the survey. One hundred sixty-seven (18%) self-identified as UIM. UIM residents had a lower sense of belonging than non-UIM residents [mean (SD) 3.6 (0.87) vs. 4.0 (0.57)]. Black/AA and Hispanic/Latinx residents had the lowest sense of belonging [3.5 (0.82) and 2.8 (0.93), respectively]. UIM residents demonstrated decreased sense of belonging in programs that lacked bias training and where peers discriminated against them. Sense of belonging was increased in programs where they perceived a sense of support, respect or values alignment. Surprisingly, individual UIM resident sense of belonging was not improved by having more UIM residents in a program.
UIM paediatric residents experience a decreased sense of belonging during training. Programs can support sense of belonging for UIM residents by demonstrating respect and support for them and by offering systems for bias training and reporting bias and discrimination. Recruiting a greater number of UIM trainees remains important; however, compositional diversity alone does not improve a sense of belonging for UIM residents. There is continued need for structural/institutional change, including addressing institutional culture and structural racism.
归属感有助于学业成就,并鼓励职业坚持。本研究的目的是通过描述美国医学领域代表性不足(UIM)的儿科和内科-儿科住院医师的经历,来确定哪些个人和机构因素会影响一个人的归属感。
作者对儿科和内科-儿科住院医师进行了一项全国性调查。这项基于网络的23项匿名调查于2020年10月至2021年1月期间开展,包括关于社会人口学特征以及对归属感、价值观、项目或机构的共同使命或价值观以及尊重的个人看法等问题。作者使用线性混合模型和拟合回归模型来研究影响归属感、价值观和尊重的个人因素和环境因素。
在29个住院医师培训项目中,1748名居民中有938名(53%)完成了调查。167名(18%)自我认定为UIM。UIM住院医师的归属感低于非UIM住院医师[均值(标准差)3.6(0.87)对4.0(0.57)]。黑人/非裔美国人和西班牙裔/拉丁裔住院医师的归属感最低[分别为3.5(0.82)和2.8(0.93)]。在缺乏偏见培训以及同伴对他们有歧视的项目中,UIM住院医师的归属感较低。在他们感受到支持、尊重或价值观一致的项目中,归属感会增强。令人惊讶的是,项目中有更多UIM住院医师并不会提高个体UIM住院医师的归属感。
UIM儿科住院医师在培训期间归属感降低。项目可以通过对UIM住院医师表示尊重和支持,并提供偏见培训以及举报偏见和歧视的系统,来增强他们的归属感。招募更多UIM学员仍然很重要;然而,仅组成多样性并不能提高UIM住院医师的归属感。持续需要进行结构/机构变革,包括解决机构文化和结构性种族主义问题。