Bekele Abebe, Regnier Denis, Swedberg Claire O, Lemu Eden Abate, Giraneza Christelle Uwantege, Bradley Elizabeth H
University of Global Health Equity, Butaro, Rwanda.
Vassar College, 124 Raymond Ave, Poughkeepsie, NY, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2025 Apr 25;25(1):610. doi: 10.1186/s12909-025-07157-z.
Medical educators have underscored the need for medical students to study the larger sociocultural and economic forces that influence health rather than simply basic and clinical sciences; however, previous studies have not evaluated the impact of implementing a full-scale liberal arts approach to medical education. Such a model has been implemented at the University of Global Health Equity (UGHE) in Rwanda, and we sought to evaluate the student experience.
We used a qualitative study with a grounded theory approach with in-depth interviews of MBBS students at UGHE. Interviews were conducted by members of the researcher team unknown to MBBS students using a semi-structured discussion guide; interviews continued until the point of theoretical saturation, and we used the constant comparison method of qualitative data analysis to understand recurrent themes.
Participants (n = 18) were evenly split between male and female; 66.7% were from Rwanda and 33.3% were international students. Participants had completed the liberal arts component of the curriculum, which was given in the first 6 months of the MBBS. Recurrent themes emerged in four broad areas pertaining to what the liberal arts approach was and its impact on students, their peer groups, and their perceived clinical capability. The four recurrent themes were: (1) the liberal arts experience encompassed a unique approach to class content, pedagogy, and culture, (2) it widened student perspectives, (3) it strengthened peer relations and teamwork skills, and (4) students believed it improved their clinical capability.
Medical students reported a profound effect of including a liberal arts approach in the medical undergraduate curriculum as delivered at UGHE. With increased accessibility to online education, it has never been more important to examine and support the humanization of education-particularly for medical students who wish to tackle global health equity. A liberal arts approach may offer a path forward.
医学教育工作者强调医学生需要研究影响健康的更广泛的社会文化和经济力量,而不仅仅是基础和临床科学;然而,以往的研究尚未评估实施全面文科方法对医学教育的影响。卢旺达的全球卫生公平大学(UGHE)已经实施了这样一种模式,我们试图评估学生的体验。
我们采用了基于扎根理论的定性研究方法,对UGHE的医学学士学生进行了深入访谈。访谈由医学学士学生不认识的研究团队成员使用半结构化讨论指南进行;访谈持续到理论饱和点,我们使用定性数据分析的持续比较方法来理解反复出现的主题。
参与者(n = 18)男女比例均衡;66.7%来自卢旺达,33.3%是国际学生。参与者已经完成了课程中的文科部分,该部分在医学学士课程的前6个月进行。在与文科方法是什么及其对学生、他们的同龄人群体和他们感知的临床能力的影响相关的四个广泛领域中出现了反复出现的主题。这四个反复出现的主题是:(1)文科体验包括对课程内容、教学方法和文化的独特方法,(2)它拓宽了学生的视野,(3)它加强了同伴关系和团队合作技能,(4)学生认为它提高了他们的临床能力。
医学生报告说,在UGHE提供的医学本科课程中纳入文科方法产生了深远影响。随着在线教育的普及,审视和支持教育的人性化变得前所未有的重要——特别是对于希望解决全球卫生公平问题的医学生。文科方法可能提供一条前进的道路。