| Literature DB >> 28573595 |
JuLeigh Petty1, Jonathan M Metzl2, Mia R Keeys3.
Abstract
The inclusion of structural competency training in pre-health undergraduate programs may offer significant benefits to future healthcare professionals. This paper presents the results of a comparative study of an interdisciplinary pre-health curriculum based in structural competency with a traditional premedical curriculum. The authors describe a new evaluation tool, the Structural Foundations of Health Survey © (2016), developed to evaluate structural skills and sensibilities. The authors use the survey to evaluate two groups of graduating seniors at Vanderbilt University-majors in an interdisciplinary pre-health curriculum titled Medicine, Health, and Society (MHS), and premed science majors-with particular attention to understanding how political, cultural, economic, and social factors shape health. Results suggest that MHS majors identified and analyzed relationships between structural factors and health outcomes at higher rates and in deeper ways than did premed science majors. MHS students also demonstrated higher understanding of structural and cultural competency in their approaches to race, intersectionality, and racial health disparities. The skills that MHS students exhibited represent proficiencies increasingly emphasized by the MCAT, the AAMC, and other educational bodies that, in an era of epigenetics and social determinants, emphasize how contextual factors shape expressions of health and illness.Entities:
Keywords: Health disparities; Health justice; Premedical education; Race; Structural competency
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28573595 PMCID: PMC5688197 DOI: 10.1007/s10912-017-9449-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Humanit ISSN: 1041-3545
Medicine, health and society (MHS) curriculum overview
| MHS Major Requirementsa | Examples of MHS course titles and content | |
|---|---|---|
| One core course | • Politics of health |
|
| Four courses in one concentration area | • Global health | |
| One Disciplinary Coursec | • Health economics | |
| Six elective courses | As part of their electives, students may take up to 4 biomedical prerequisites. | |
aEach course counts as 3 credit-hours toward the 36-credit-hour major in MHS.
bThe Critical Health Studies allows students to craft an individualized plan of study with a MHS faculty adviser.
cThe Disciplinary Course is a distribution requirement; it may be taken as part of the concentration or elective courses.
Self-reported professional preparationa
| Respondents, mean (sd) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indicate how well you were prepared in each area through your program of studyb | Total | MHS | Premed |
|
| Oral communication skills | 3.5 (1.03) | 3.54 (.97) | 3.49 (1.11) | .775 |
| Understanding of the relationship between socioeconomic factors, health, and medicine | 4.1 (1.17) | 4.67 (.61) | 3.33 (1.31) | <.001 |
| Overall knowledge about the American health system | 3.043 (1.19) | 3.55 (.98) | 2.37 (1.11) | <.001 |
| Ability to work cooperatively with diverse people | 4.18 (.99) | 4.29 (.86) | 4.03 (1.14) | .111 |
| Knowledge of basic components of the Affordable Care Act | 2.76 (1.30) | 3.19 (1.19) | 2.17 (1.23) | <.001 |
| Writing ability | 4.00 (.94) | 4.11 (.87) | 3.87 (1.01) | .135 |
| Research skills including formulating research questions and hypothesis | 4.02 (.94) | 3.93 (.92) | 4.16 (.95) | .143 |
| Critical thinking skills | 4.41 (.74) | 4.35 (.72) | 4.50 (.76) | .207 |
| Ability to discuss and negotiate controversial issues | 4.25 (.86) | 4.41 (.76) | 4.03 (.95) | .008 |
| Interpreting quantitative research | 4.04 (1.02) | 4.01 (.99) | 4.08 (1.07) | .692 |
aData are from 155 seniors who responded to a spring 2015 survey about the pre-health professional curriculum
bStudents indicated their professional preparedness in each of these areas on a scale of 1 (poor preparation) to 5 (excellent preparation)
Fig. 1Word map of MHS majors’ open-ended response to “What are the three most important influences on people’s health?’’. Data are from 155 seniors who responded to a spring 2015 survey about the pre-health professional curriculum
Fig. 2Word map of premed majors’ open-ended response to “What are the three most important influences on people’s health?’’. Data are from 155 seniors who responded to a spring 2015 survey about the pre-health professional curriculum
Illustrative quotes from open-ended responses (coded words underlined)a
| Prompt: | MHS | Premed |
|---|---|---|
| Cross-cultural Vignette | Mrs. Hernandez may live in a | Since Mrs. Hernandez is a foreigner, she may not necessarily trust or listen to an American doctor. Also, the |
| Childhood Obesity US South |
| Southern comfort food is a hallmark of the South. Greasy, fried, and buttered goods are a must. Therefore, I chose |
| Cardiac Mortality |
| I think there are many |
| Drug Ad | The ad caters to the beliefs that men do not have mental disorders, that | This advertisement plays on the guilt of |
aData are from 155 seniors who responded to a spring 2015 survey about the pre-health professional curriculum
Students’ identification of three factors which best explain select health disparitiesa
| Respondents, no (%) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Childhood obesity | Heart disease | |||||||
| Respondents selecting at least 1 from each category | Total | MHS | Premed |
| Total | MHS | Premed |
|
|
| 130 (84) | 75 (89) | 55 (54) | .024 | 104 (67) | 56 (52) | 48 (69) | .947 |
|
| 117 (75) | 72 (85) | 45 (64) | .112 | 134 (86) | 78 (92) | 56 (80) | .012 |
|
| 59 (38) | 25 (29) | 34 (49) | .017 | 55 (35) | 31 (37) | 24 (34) | 1.00 |
aData are from 155 seniors who responded to a spring 2015 survey about the pre-health professional curriculum
Students’ open-ended responses explaining health disparitiesa
| Respondents, no (%) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Childhood obesity | Heart disease | |||||||
| Demonstrated competencies: | Total | MHS | Premed |
| Total | MHS | Premed |
|
|
| 118 (76) | 71 (84) | 47 (67) | .017 | 53 (34) | 23 (27) | 30 (43) | .039 |
| Link cultural difference to structural contexts identified by the AAMC: social determinants of health (e.g. SES, neighbor factors, cost of healthcare), health systems, and institutional racism. | 47 (30) | 33 (39) | 14 (20) | .011 | 11 (7) | 8 (9) | 3 (4) | .219 |
| Link health outcomes to individual or family level factors that impact living and working conditions: income, educational level, health insurance status, and access to healthcare. | 84 (54) | 56 (66) | 28 (40) | .001 | 64 (42) | 38 (45) | 26 (37) | .344 |
|
| 68 (44) | 48 (56) | 20 (29) | <.001 | 30 (19) | 16 (19) | 14 (20) | .855 |
|
| ||||||||
| Physician bias | 9 (6) | 4 (5) | 5 (7) | .522 | 46 (30) | 40 (47) | 6 (9) | <.001 |
| Discrimination | 11 (7) | 8 (9) | 3 (4) | .219 | 31 (20) | 26 (31) | 5 (7) | <.001 |
| Institutional Racism | 10 (6) | 6 (7) | 4 (6) | .737 | 64 (41) | 43 (51) | 21 (30) | .009 |
| Socioeconomic Differences | 13 (8) | 7 (8) | 6 (9) | .941 | 22 (14) | 21 (25) | 1 (1) | <.001 |
aData are from 155 seniors who responded to a spring 2015 survey about the pre-health professional curriculum.