School of Clinical Medicine, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
University Centre for Rural Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Clin Teach. 2024 Dec;21(6):e13831. doi: 10.1111/tct.13831. Epub 2024 Nov 1.
Limited evidence exists around authentic activities that can positively influence students' knowledge of and appreciation for the First Nations peoples' culture, impacts of colonisation and other determinants of health. A renewed Indigenous Health curriculum provided us with an opportunity to implement a cultural immersion for medical students to enhance their cultural awareness and competency.
Our approach towards the design and evaluation of cultural immersion was guided by three key frameworks-a strengths-based approach towards curriculum design, Indigenous ways of knowing and being and immersions as transformative pedagogy.
Pre- and post-immersion surveys were sent to 260 first-year medical students in 2020 and 323 students in 2021 who were the participants. Response rates were 37% (2020) and 47% (2021). The data indicated significant improvements in students' knowledge of Indigenous cultural beliefs and history as well as confidence in working with Indigenous populations. Students' comments indicated their experiences varied on a continuum of four ways of 'knowing': reluctant, receiving, relating and reconstructing their beliefs. Their ways of 'being' varied across four levels: privileged, feeling discomforted, being humbled and agentic.
The study extends the limited evidence of theoretically informed interventions that have the potential to positively influence medical students' knowledge and appreciation of Indigenous history, culture and its impact of health outcomes. Cultural immersion experiences, when co-designed with the community and in consideration with students' prior beliefs, are powerful tools to promote capabilities for working with Indigenous patients in culturally safe ways.
关于能够积极影响学生对原住民文化、殖民化影响和其他健康决定因素的知识和欣赏的真实活动,证据有限。新的原住民健康课程为我们提供了一个机会,为医学生实施文化沉浸,以提高他们的文化意识和能力。
我们设计和评估文化沉浸的方法遵循三个关键框架——课程设计的优势方法、原住民的认知和存在方式以及沉浸式教学作为变革性教学。
2020 年和 2021 年,我们向 260 名一年级医学生和 323 名参与者发送了入学前和入学后的调查。回复率分别为 37%(2020 年)和 47%(2021 年)。数据表明,学生对原住民文化信仰和历史的了解以及与原住民群体合作的信心有了显著提高。学生的评论表明,他们的体验在四种“认知”方式的连续体上有所不同:勉强、接受、关联和重构他们的信仰。他们的“存在”方式在四个层次上有所不同:享有特权、感到不适、谦卑和有代理权。
该研究扩展了有限的理论指导干预证据,这些干预有可能积极影响医学生对原住民历史、文化及其对健康结果的影响的知识和欣赏。当与社区共同设计并考虑学生的先前信仰时,文化沉浸体验是促进以文化安全方式与原住民患者合作的能力的有力工具。