| Literature DB >> 27681538 |
Diana J Burgess1,2, Sara E Burke3, Brooke A Cunningham4, John F Dovidio3, Rachel R Hardeman5, Yuefeng Hou6, David B Nelson7,8, Sylvia P Perry9, Sean M Phelan10, Mark W Yeazel4, Michelle van Ryn10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a paucity of evidence on how to train medical students to provide equitable, high quality care to racial and ethnic minority patients. We test the hypothesis that medical schools' ability to foster a learning orientation toward interracial interactions (i.e., that students can improve their ability to successfully interact with people of another race and learn from their mistakes), will contribute to white medical students' readiness to care for racial minority patients. We then test the hypothesis that white medical students who perceive their medical school environment as supporting a learning orientation will benefit more from disparities training.Entities:
Keywords: Attitude of health personnel; Disparities; Medical education; Physician-patient relations
Year: 2016 PMID: 27681538 PMCID: PMC5041316 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-016-0769-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Characteristics of the study sample
| Students ( | Schools ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Female | 1151 (48.1) | |
| Male | 1243 (51.9) | |
| Region | ||
| Northeast | 12 (24.5 %) | |
| Southeast | 12 (24.5 %) | |
| Central South | 8 (16.3 %) | |
| Midwest | 11 (22.4 %) | |
| Southwest | 4 (8.2 %) | |
| Northwest | 2 (4.1 %) | |
| Public Medical School | ||
| Yes | 31 (63.3) | |
| No | 18 (36.7) | |
| Highest education of parents | ||
| Less than Bachelor’s Degree | 305 (12.7) | |
| Bachelor’s Degree | 575 (24.0) | |
| Graduate Degree | 1511 (63.1) | |
| Agea | 24.0 (2.63) | |
| Percentage white students in schoola | 66.5 % (9.4) | |
Note. Unless otherwise indicated each cell reports the N (%)
aCell reports the mean (SD)
Descriptive statistics of self-efficacy, skills, interest, hours of disparity coursework, school learning orientation, and student learning orientation
| n | Max | Min | Mean | Std. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-efficacy | 2366 | 5.00 | 1.00 | 4.29 | 0.71 |
| Skills | 2360 | 5.00 | 1.00 | 3.94 | 0.80 |
| Interest | 2359 | 5.00 | 1.00 | 3.70 | 0.97 |
| Hours of disparity coursework | 2337 | 50.00 | 0.00 | 11.68 | 9.45 |
| School learning orientation | 49 | 6.03 | 4.28 | 5.33 | 0.39 |
| Student learning orientation | 2350 | 7.00 | 1.00 | 5.42 | 1.31 |
Effects of learning orientation and hours of disparities-related coursework on skill, self-efficacy, and interest at working with racial minority patients
| Skill | Self-efficacy | Interest | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypothesis 1 learning | |||
| School learning orientation | 0.171 (0.052) | 0.259 (0.053) | −0.033 (0.069) |
| Disparities coursework learning | 0.012 (0.002) | 0.007 (0.002) | 0.004 (0.002) |
| Hypothesis 2 | |||
| School learning orientation | 0.026 (0.051) | 0.152 (0.052) | −0.119 (0.066) |
| Disparities coursework | 0.008 (0.002) | 0.004 (0.002) | 0.001 (0.002) |
| Student learning orientation | 0.156 (0.015) | 0.115 (0.013) | 0.096 (0.021) |
| Hypothesis 3 | |||
| School learning orientation | 0.030 (0.050) | 0.157 (0.051) | −0.111 (0.066) |
| Disparities coursework | 0.007 (0.002) | 0.003 (0.002) | −0.001 (0.002) |
| Student learning orientation | 0.160 (0.015) | 0.119 (0.013) | 0.104 (0.020) |
| Student learning orientation X disparities coursework | 0.003 (0.001) | 0.004 (0.001) | 0.006 (0.002) |
Note. This table summarizes a number of hierarchical linear models. Each cell reports an unstandardized slope (b) for a variable of interest, the standard error of that slope (in parentheses), and the p-value. All models include a random intercept by school and include region of the country (Northeast, Southeast, Central South, Midwest, Southwest, Northeast), public/private and percentage of white students (based on data collected by the AAMC in 2010) as school level covariates, and student age, gender, and the highest education level of either parent as student-level covariates
Fig. 1Effect of growth orientation and hours of disparities training on perceived skill developing a positive relationship with racial minority patients, self-efficacy in working with racial minority patients, and interest in working with racial minority patients