Paul Caroline R, Chheda Shobhina, Beck Dallaghan Gary, Rusch Roberta Bartlett, Strand Karla J, Zarvan Sarah Jane, Hanson Janice L
Department of Pediatrics, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, NYU Langone Health, 555 LaGuardia Place, New York, NY 10012 USA.
Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI USA.
Med Sci Educ. 2024 Dec 13;35(1):447-458. doi: 10.1007/s40670-024-02216-4. eCollection 2025 Feb.
Medical students' accounts of gender bias in their patient care learning experiences remain limited. This study examines students' responses to gender bias and their consideration for how to prepare for gender bias in their futures.
We analyzed reflective writings of third-year clinical students. Within a phenomenology framework, conventional content analysis was used to inductively analyze all essays, using HyperResearch software. We coded in teams and reconciled disagreements, then combined codes in categories to identify themes.
Sixty-seven students (39 females; 28 males) wrote about gender bias in patient encounters. We identified five themes: bias, context, students' responses to patients' bias, patient-centered approach, and preparation for future encounters. Observations of bias addressed gender and structural bias, sexism, and racism. Students reflected on how context framed their experiences. Students aimed for patient-centered care, while simultaneously feeling ambivalence regarding patients' expressed bias. Students described their need to prepare for future experiences of gender bias and their plans to use specific strategies to cope with this bias.
Our study offers the voices of medical students regarding gender bias in their clinical learning, presenting an important perspective, given an often-hierarchical system of medical education. This examination, which includes recommendations for curricula and policies, informs education leaders of the need to incorporate preparation for dealing with gender bias and to help students personally as they face challenging encounters with patients and medical teams. Enlightened by critical theories, these findings should also motivate resident and faculty development and promote critical inquiry for institutional changes.
医学生对其患者护理学习经历中性别偏见的描述仍然有限。本研究考察了学生对性别偏见的反应以及他们对未来如何应对性别偏见的思考。
我们分析了三年级临床学生的反思性写作。在现象学框架内,使用HyperResearch软件,采用传统内容分析法对所有文章进行归纳分析。我们分组编码并协调分歧,然后将代码合并为类别以识别主题。
67名学生(39名女性;28名男性)撰写了关于患者接触中性别偏见的内容。我们确定了五个主题:偏见、背景、学生对患者偏见的反应、以患者为中心的方法以及对未来接触的准备。对偏见的观察涉及性别和结构性偏见、性别歧视和种族主义。学生们反思了背景如何构建他们的经历。学生们旨在提供以患者为中心的护理,同时对患者表达的偏见感到矛盾。学生们描述了他们为未来的性别偏见经历做好准备的必要性以及他们使用特定策略应对这种偏见的计划。
我们的研究提供了医学生对其临床学习中性别偏见的看法,鉴于医学教育通常具有等级制度,这呈现了一个重要的视角。这项研究包括对课程和政策的建议,让教育领导者认识到有必要纳入应对性别偏见的准备内容,并在学生面对与患者和医疗团队的挑战性接触时给予个人帮助。受批判理论的启发,这些发现也应推动住院医师和教师的发展,并促进对机构变革的批判性探究。