| Literature DB >> 28050653 |
Francisca van der Meulen1, Cornelia Fluit2, Mieke Albers3, Roland Laan2, Antoine Lagro-Janssen3.
Abstract
Although several projects have addressed the importance of gender health issues in medical education, the sustainability of change efforts in medical education has rarely been addressed. Understanding the possible facilitators or barriers to sustainability may help to develop future interventions that are effective in maintaining gender health issues as a topic in medical curricula. The aim of this study is to provide a longitudinal evaluation of changes regarding gender health issues that occurred in the past decade and the factors that influenced this process. The coursebooks of eight theoretical courses of the Nijmegen medical curriculum were screened on the basis of criteria for an integrated gender perspective in medical education. To assess the sustainability of gender health issues, the screening results from 2014 were compared with those of a similar project in 2005. In addition, open interviews were conducted with eight coordinators to identify facilitators and barriers influencing the sustainability of gender health issues. Analysis showed that, over the past decade, the implementation of gender health issues was mainly sustained and additional changes were made, resulting in an ongoing gender perspective in the Nijmegen medical curriculum. The coordinators mentioned several factors that influenced the sustainability of implementation in medical education: coordinators' and teachers' gender-sensitive attitude, competing demands, the presence of sex and gender in learning objectives, examinations and evaluation, organizational support and curriculum revisions. Our findings suggest that, in implementing sex and gender in medical education, medical faculties need to focus on top-down support in incorporating sex and gender into core objectives and time spent on incorporating sex and gender into medicine, and on the continuous training of teaching staff.Entities:
Keywords: Implementation; Sex and gender; Sustainability; Undergraduate medical education
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28050653 PMCID: PMC5663800 DOI: 10.1007/s10459-016-9742-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ISSN: 1382-4996 Impact factor: 3.853
Criteria of an integrated gender perspective in the medical curricula
| 1. Students are able to recognize and explain sex/gender differences with regard to issues, such as pharmacotherapy, urinary tract infections and other micturition complaints, sexual abuse and violence, partner violence, cardiovascular disease and communication |
Fig. 1Bachelor’s program at the Radboud university medical center, based on de Visser et al. (2016)
Overview of the sustainability of gender issues 2005–2014
| Course | Year | Adjustment | Orientation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sustained | |||
| Regulation and integration 1 | 1 | Sex as a factor of variability in reactions to medication | Biomedical |
| Circulation 2 | 2 | Sex related to presentation of chest pain, coronary diseases | Biomedical |
| 2 | Sex/gender-specific items in self-study assignment and/or working group | Biomedical/psychosocial | |
| 2 | Gender stereotyping towards patients | Psychosocial | |
| Metabolism 2 | 2 | Gender/sex differences; differences in prevalence and cause in patient cases | Biomedical/psychosocial |
| 2 | Gender/sex differences in diagnosis and treatment of upper abdominal complaints, paying special attention to sexual abuse | Biomedical/psychosocial | |
| 2 | Sex differences in digestive tract disorders, particularly constipation and fecal incontinence | Biomedical | |
| 2 | Contraceptive and infertility aspects in Crohn’s disease | Biomedical | |
| Disappeared | |||
| MPD 1: Doctor and patient | 1 | Gender as a psychosocial factor in the bio-psychosocial model | Psychosocial |
| MPD 4: Doctor and healthcare | 3 | Gender in the consulting room | Psychosocial |
| 3 | Gender and socio-economic health differences | Psychosocial | |
| 3 | Gender-specific healthcare as a form of healthcare | Psychosocial | |
| Metabolism 2 | 2 | Abdominal pain as connected with sexual abuse; female victim invited to the lecture | Biomedical/psychosocial |
| Added between 2005–2014 | |||
| MPD 1: Doctor and patient | 1 | Sex differences in the prevalence of several diseases: breast cancer, COPD, CVS and epilepsy | Biomedical |
| Regulation and integration 1 | 1 | Toxicity of medication use in pregnancy | Biomedical |
| Water and salt metabolism 2 | 2 | Sex differences in urinary tract infections and incontinence | Biomedical |
| Mental problems | 3 | Sex differences in prevalence of eating disorders, depression and schizophrenia | Biomedical |
| Reproduction | 3 | Sex/gender differences in contraception, sexuality, sexual problems, STDs and sexual identity | Biomedical/psychosocial |
| 3 | Differences in approach to various age groups and sex on the basis of urinary tract infections | Biomedical | |
MPD medical professional development