| Literature DB >> 26603884 |
M E Muntinga1, V Q E Krajenbrink2, S M Peerdeman2,3, G Croiset2, P Verdonk4.
Abstract
Recent years have seen a rise in the efforts to implement diversity topics into medical education, using either a 'narrow' or a 'broad' definition of culture. These developments urge that outcomes of such efforts are systematically evaluated by mapping the curriculum for diversity-responsive content. This study was aimed at using an intersectionality-based approach to define diversity-related learning objectives and to evaluate how biomedical and sociocultural aspects of diversity were integrated into a medical curriculum in the Netherlands. We took a three-phase mixed methods approach. In phase one and two, we defined essential learning objectives based on qualitative interviews with school stakeholders and diversity literature. In phase three, we screened the written curriculum for diversity content (culture, sex/gender and class) and related the results to learning objectives defined in phase two. We identified learning objectives in three areas of education (medical knowledge and skills, patient-physician communication, and reflexivity). Most diversity content pertained to biomedical knowledge and skills. Limited attention was paid to sociocultural issues as determinants of health and healthcare use. Intersections of culture, sex/gender and class remained mostly unaddressed. The curriculum's diversity-responsiveness could be improved by an operationalization of diversity that goes beyond biomedical traits of assumed homogeneous social groups. Future efforts to take an intersectionality-based approach to curriculum evaluations should include categories of difference other than culture, sex/gender and class as separate, equally important patient identities or groups.Entities:
Keywords: Class; Culture; Curriculum evaluation; Diversity; Diversity-responsiveness; Gender; Intersectionality; Medical education
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26603884 PMCID: PMC4923090 DOI: 10.1007/s10459-015-9650-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ISSN: 1382-4996 Impact factor: 3.853
Three learning objectives for a diversity-responsive curriculum
| Area of medical education | Learning objectives |
|---|---|
| Medical knowledge and skills | (1) The student is able to recognize and explain differences between cultural groups with regards to specific conditions, chronic disease, self-management and lifestyle, psychosocial complaints and psychiatry, sexual health and sexuality, and background determinants of health and health care use |
| Patient–physician communication | (1) The student is aware of cultural differences in communication and physician–patient interaction and is able to adequately communicate with non-majority patients |
| Reflexivity | The student has an open attitude toward patients with a cultural background different from their own, is able to deliver culturally competent and gender specific health care, and is critically conscious with regards to diversity aspects in health and illness |
Results of curriculum screening for diversity content in the domain of medical knowledge and skills, stratified for culture, sex/gender and class
| Medical knowledge and skills | Culture | Sex/gender | Class |
|---|---|---|---|
| Specific conditions | Vitamin D-deficiency, sickle cell disease, thalassemia, tropical communicable diseases, tuberculosis, malaria, familial Mediterranean fevera | Adolescence (endocrinology, pathology, neurology, genetics, sociocultural factors), pregnancy (pathology), menopause, menstrual cycle, dysmenorrhoea, amenorrhoea, UTI’s, UTI’s and UI during pregnancy, pharmacotherapy during pregnancy and lactation, physical examinationa | Childrens’ growth and developmenta |
| Chronic diseases, self-management and lifestyle | Diabetes, health promotion and lifestyle (smoking, exercise, nutrition)a
| Breast cancer, testicular cancer, prostate cancer, cervical cancer (pathology)a
| Life expectancy (DALY’s and QALY’s), lifestyle (smoking, exercise, nutrition)a
|
| Mental health and development | Presentation of illness, interpretation of symptoms, disease experience (including pain), psychiatric conditions (depression, schizophrenia), coping with a physical disability (deafness)a
| Eating disorders and obesity, depression and anxiety disorders, Posttraumatic stress disordersa
| Exposure to unfavourable working conditionsb |
| Sexual health, reproductive health and society | Sexuality and culture of sexuality (marital practices, virginity, circumcision, genital mutilation), sexual health (HIV/STI’s)a
| Male and female sexuality, sexual functioning and sexual dysfunction, reproduction and fertility, reproductive health (contraception, sexually transmitted infections, HPV, abortion), sexual identity (homosexuality), gender identity and gender dysphoria, paraphilias, child abusea
| |
| Background determinants of health and health care use | Access to health care, patient’s context, health of undocumented migrants, ethical issues and dilemmas (autonomy), alternative medicinea
| Gender and culture/ethnic background, undocumented migrantsa
| Health literacya
|
|
| Language barriersa
| Sexual harassment in patient–physician relationship, sexual harassment at work, discussing sexuality and sexual functioning with patients | c |
|
| Learning goal “The student has an open attitude towards patients with a non-Dutch cultural background”a
| Learning goal “The student offers gender specific health care/quality of care”a
| c |
aCategory or learning objective explicitly included
bCategory or learning objective implicitly included
cCategory not included