| Literature DB >> 27785350 |
Tracy E Madsen1, Alyson J McGregor1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sex and gender influence disease presentation, treatment, healthcare access, and long-term outcomes. It is uncertain to what extent sex- and gender-based medicine (SGBM) content has been integrated into emergency medicine (EM) residency curricula. We aimed to determine if SGBM is being taught in EM residency training, if EM residency program directors (PDs) declare SGBM a curriculum priority, and if recent graduates (RGs) of EM residency programs declare SGBM as relevant to their practice.Entities:
Keywords: Curriculum; Emergency medicine; Gap analysis/needs assessment; Gender
Year: 2016 PMID: 27785350 PMCID: PMC5073786 DOI: 10.1186/s13293-016-0098-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Description of survey respondents
| Residency graduates | % ( |
|---|---|
| Female gender | 42.7 % (94) |
| Type of residency training program | |
| 1 through 4 programs | 20.5 % (45) |
| 2 through 4 programs | 9.1 % (20) |
| 1 through 3 programs | 70.5 % (155) |
| Geographic area of residency training | |
| Northeast | 45.0 % (98) |
| South | 20.2 % (44) |
| Midwest | 25.7 % (56) |
| West | 9.2 % (20) |
| Current practice type | |
| Private | 54.3 % (119) |
| Academic | 24.7 % (54) |
| Combination | 21.0 % (46) |
| Program directors | |
| Program type | |
| 1 through 4 programs | 20 % (10) |
| 2 through 4 programs | 6.0 % (3) |
| 1 through 3 programs | 74.0 % (37) |
| Geographic area of residency program | |
| Northeast | 38.0 % (19) |
| South | 22.0 % (11) |
| Midwest | 28.0 % (14) |
| West | 12.0 % (6) |
Resident graduates’ responses to survey item, “Have you been trained to take gender into account in the presentation and management of the following conditions?”
| Disease condition | No ( | Somewhat ( | Yes ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endocrine disorders (diabetes mellitus, thyroid disease) | 81 | 36.7 % | 65 | 29.4 % | 75 | 33.9 % |
| Acute coronary syndrome | 3 | 1.4 % | 41 | 18.6 % | 177 | 80.1 % |
| Hypertension | 119 | 54.1 % | 60 | 27.3 % | 41 | 18.6 % |
| Thromboembolic disease (DVT and PE) | 65 | 29.4 % | 53 | 24.0 % | 103 | 46.6 % |
| Asthma/COPD | 192 | 86.9 % | 18 | 8.1 % | 11 | 5.0 % |
| Trauma | 76 | 34.5 % | 61 | 27.7 % | 83 | 37.7 % |
| Partner abuse | 6 | 2.7 % | 48 | 21.7 % | 167 | 75.6 % |
| Carotid/vertebral artery dissections | 162 | 73.6 % | 35 | 15.9 % | 23 | 10.5 % |
| Neurologic conditions (multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, CVA, seizures, headache) | 67 | 30.3 % | 60 | 27.1 % | 94 | 42.5 % |
| GI conditions (biliary disease, dyspepsia, IBS, appendicitis, abdominal pain) | 55 | 24.9 % | 64 | 29.0 % | 102 | 46.2 % |
| Substance abuse | 121 | 55.0 % | 63 | 28.6 % | 36 | 16.4 % |
| Depression/suicide | 39 | 17.8 % | 51 | 23.3 % | 129 | 58.9 % |
| Urinary tract disorders | 18 | 8.1 % | 45 | 20.4 % | 158 | 71.5 % |
| Sexually transmitted diseases | 25 | 11.3 % | 49 | 22.2 % | 147 | 66.5 % |
| HIV/AIDS | 144 | 65.5 % | 46 | 20.9 % | 30 | 13.6 % |
| Autoimmune disease | 27 | 12.3 % | 67 | 30.5 % | 126 | 57.3 % |
| Pulmonary disease (sarcoidosis, PPH) | 129 | 58.4 % | 53 | 24.0 % | 39 | 17.6 % |
| Osteoporosis/fracture management | 41 | 18.6 % | 44 | 19.9 % | 136 | 61.5 % |
| Pain management | 150 | 68.2 % | 44 | 20.0 % | 26 | 11.8 % |
| Pharmacokinetics | 135 | 61.4 % | 63 | 28.6 % | 22 | 10.0 % |
| Communication styles | 60 | 27.1 % | 81 | 36.7 % | 80 | 36.2 % |
Program directors’ responses to survey item, “Does your current residency curriculum include explicit training (didactic and clinical) about gender differences in the presentation and management of the following clinical or disease states?”
| Disease condition | No ( | Somewhat ( | Yes ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endocrine disorders (diabetes mellitus, thyroid disease) | 22 | 44.0 % | 14 | 28.0 % | 14 | 28.0 % |
| Acute coronary syndrome | 3 | 6.0 % | 12 | 24.0 % | 35 | 70.0 % |
| Hypertension | 30 | 62.5 % | 11 | 22.9 % | 7 | 14.6 % |
| Thromboembolic disease (DVT and PE) | 21 | 42.0 % | 10 | 20.0 % | 19 | 38.0 % |
| Asthma/COPD | 35 | 70.0 % | 12 | 24.0 % | 3 | 6.0 % |
| Trauma | 12 | 24.0 % | 13 | 26.0 % | 25 | 50.0 % |
| Partner abuse | 3 | 6.0 % | 6 | 12.0 % | 41 | 82.0 % |
| Carotid/vertebral artery dissections | 38 | 76.0 % | 7 | 14.0 % | 5 | 10.0 % |
| Neurologic conditions (multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, CVA, seizures, headache) | 15 | 30.0 % | 22 | 44.0 % | 13 | 26.0 % |
| GI Disorders (biliary disease, dyspepsia, IBS, abdominal pain, appendicitis) | 20 | 40.0 % | 18 | 36.0 % | 12 | 24.0 % |
| Substance abuse | 29 | 58.0 % | 13 | 26.0 % | 8 | 16.0 % |
| Depression/suicide | 8 | 16.0 % | 14 | 28.0 % | 28 | 56.0 % |
| Urinary tract disorders | 3 | 6.0 % | 13 | 26.0 % | 34 | 68.0 % |
| Sexually transmitted diseases | 5 | 10.0 % | 12 | 24.0 % | 33 | 66.0 % |
| HIV/AIDS | 26 | 52.0 % | 17 | 34.0 % | 7 | 14.0 % |
| Autoimmune disease | 17 | 34.0 % | 20 | 40.0 % | 13 | 26.0 % |
| Pulmonary disease (sarcoidosis, PPH) | 33 | 66.0 % | 11 | 22.0 % | 6 | 12.0 % |
| Osteoporosis/fracture management | 7 | 14.0 % | 24 | 48.0 % | 19 | 38.0 % |
| Pain management | 32 | 64.0 % | 10 | 20.0 % | 8 | 16.0 % |
| Communication styles | 21 | 42.0 % | 14 | 28.0 % | 15 | 30.0 % |
| Pharmacokinetics | 36 | 72.0 % | 12 | 24.0 % | 2 | 4.0 % |
Fig. 1SGBM as a curriculum priority for program directors (PDs) vs. relevance of SGBM to EM practice as per residency graduates (RGs). SGBM sex- and gender-based medicine, EM emergency medicine
Perceived obstacles to incorporating SGBM into EM residency curriculum
| Potential Obstacle | % (n) |
|---|---|
| Competing curricular demands | 76.6 % (36) |
| Lack of qualified faculty | 21.3 % (10) |
| Lack of faculty interest | 36.2 % (17) |
| Lack of resident interest | 21.3 % (10) |
| Lack of evidence-based content | 53.2 % (25) |
| Lack of clinical exposure | 2.1 % (1) |
| Other (please specify) | 8.5 % (4) |
SGBM sex- and gender-based medicine, EM emergency medicine
Fig. 2Settings in which resident graduates (RGs) learned the most SGBM vs. program directors’ (PDs) responses describing where residents should learn the most about SGBM