Greene Adina, Ghalambor Tara, Penner Scott, Irwin Chase, Hastings K Taraszka
University of Arizona College of Medicine- Phoenix Phoenix Arizona USA.
Mayo Clinic Department of Dermatology Scottsdale Arizona USA.
Skin Health Dis. 2024 Sep 3;4(6):e425. doi: 10.1002/ski2.425. eCollection 2024 Dec.
Various studies have revealed that there is a disproportionately low representation of skin of colour (SOC) in medical school dermatologic curriculum and board study resources.
First-year and second-year medical students were emailed an 18-question survey regarding (1) identifying correct diagnoses of dermatologic conditions on either White skin or SOC and (2) their confidence in identifying dermatologic conditions on SOC.
15% of the images of dermatologic conditions included in the institutional preclinical curriculum show images of patients with SOC. Regarding overall scores for diagnosing dermatologic diseases, students performed similarly on both the White image survey (61.73%) and SOC image survey (66.20%) with no statistically significant differences between surveys ( = 0.14). Second-year medical students performed better than first-year medical students overall ( = 0.01) and on White skin image survey scores ( = 0.02) but not on people of colour image survey scores ( = 0.09). Students largely agreed that they were more comfortable identifying dermatologic diagnoses on White skin and that their school could benefit from increased SOC dermatological resources.
The overall low scores for the diagnosis of common skin conditions on both the White image and SOC image survey by first- and second-year students are not surprising given the results of a prior study and support the need for re-exposure to dermatology presentations in all skin types during the preclinical curriculum. The low scores support the need for changes in the pre-clinical dermatology curriculum to improve diagnostic ability. Second-year students performed better at diagnosing dermatologic conditions overall and on White skin compared to SOC at the end of their didactic years, possibly due to an underrepresentation of SOC images in institutional and outside educational resources. Attitudes towards school-specific dermatologic SOC education demonstrated a clear desire amongst students for more exposure to dermatologic conditions in various skin colours throughout the curriculum.
多项研究表明,在医学院的皮肤科课程和备考资源中,有色人种皮肤(SOC)的呈现比例低得不成比例。
通过电子邮件向一年级和二年级医学生发送了一份包含18个问题的调查问卷,内容涉及(1)对白人皮肤或有色人种皮肤的皮肤病状况进行正确诊断,以及(2)他们对识别有色人种皮肤的皮肤病状况的信心。
机构临床前课程中包含的皮肤病图像中有15%显示有色人种患者的图像。关于诊断皮肤病的总体得分,学生在白人图像调查(61.73%)和有色人种皮肤图像调查(66.20%)中的表现相似,两项调查之间无统计学显著差异(P = 0.14)。总体而言,二年级医学生的表现优于一年级医学生(P = 0.01),在白人皮肤图像调查得分上也是如此(P = 0.02),但在有色人种图像调查得分上并非如此(P = 0.09)。学生们普遍认为,他们在识别白人皮肤上的皮肤病诊断时更自在,并且他们的学校可以从增加的有色人种皮肤的皮肤病资源中受益。
鉴于先前一项研究的结果,一年级和二年级学生在白人图像和有色人种皮肤图像调查中对常见皮肤病诊断的总体低分并不令人惊讶,并支持在临床前课程中重新接触所有皮肤类型的皮肤病表现的必要性。低分支持了临床前皮肤科课程需要改变以提高诊断能力。在理论学习结束时,二年级学生在总体诊断皮肤病状况以及在白人皮肤上的表现优于有色人种皮肤,这可能是由于机构和外部教育资源中有色人种皮肤图像的呈现不足。对学校特定的有色人种皮肤的皮肤病教育的态度表明,学生们明确希望在整个课程中更多地接触各种肤色的皮肤病状况。