| Literature DB >> 23148763 |
Mike Rowson1, Abi Smith, Rob Hughes, Oliver Johnson, Arti Maini, Sophie Martin, Fred Martineau, J Jaime Miranda, Vicki Pollit, Rae Wake, Chris Willott, John S Yudkin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since the early 1990s there has been a burgeoning interest in global health teaching in undergraduate medical curricula. In this article we trace the evolution of this teaching and present recommendations for how the discipline might develop in future years. DISCUSSION: Undergraduate global health teaching has seen a marked growth over the past ten years, partly as a response to student demand and partly due to increasing globalization, cross-border movement of pathogens and international migration of health care workers. This teaching has many different strands and types in terms of topic focus, disciplinary background, the point in medical studies in which it is taught and whether it is compulsory or optional. We carried out a survey of medical schools across the world in an effort to analyse their teaching of global health. Results indicate that this teaching is rising in prominence, particularly through global health elective/exchange programmes and increasing teaching of subjects such as globalization and health and international comparison of health systems. Our findings indicate that global health teaching is moving away from its previous focus on tropical medicine towards issues of more global relevance. We suggest that there are three types of doctor who may wish to work in global health - the 'globalised doctor', 'humanitarian doctor' and 'policy doctor' - and that each of these three types will require different teaching in order to meet the required competencies. This teaching needs to be inserted into medical curricula in different ways, notably into core curricula, a special overseas doctor track, optional student selected components, elective programmes, optional intercalated degrees and postgraduate study.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23148763 PMCID: PMC3539925 DOI: 10.1186/1744-8603-8-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Number of responses to survey received per continent
| Oceania | 5 |
| Africa | 6 |
| South America | 7 |
| North America | 8 |
| Asia | 13 |
| Europe | 25 |
| Total | 64 |
Number and percentage of responding medical schools teaching different global health topics
| International elective exchanges | 37 | 58% |
| The effects of poverty and inequality on health | 30 | 47% |
| International comparison of health systems | 29 | 45% |
| Globalization and health | 28 | 44% |
| International comparison of burden of disease | 28 | 44% |
| Tropical medicine | 28 | 44% |
| Travel medicine | 19 | 30% |
| International health and development | 16 | 25% |
| International movement of people | 14 | 22% |
Figure 1Number of schools teaching global health topics, and length of time they have been taught.
Schematic representation of curricula for global health
| Core curricula | √ | √ | √ |
| Specialised developing countries medical track | | √ | |
| Optional intercalated degree | √ | √ | √ |
| Optional student selected component / elective course | √ | √ | √ |
| Overseas clinical placement | √ | √ | √ |
| Postgraduate study (MSc/MPH) | | √ | √ |
| Postgraduate study (DTM&H) | √ |