| Literature DB >> 30384820 |
E Marshall Brooks1, Mary Lee Magee1, Mark Ryan1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Medical school curricula increasingly seek to promote medical students' commitment to redressing health disparities, but traditional pedagogical approaches have fallen short of this goal. The objective of this work was to assess the value of using community-based guided tours of disadvantaged neighborhoods to fill this gap.Entities:
Keywords: Medical education; community tours; medical citizenship; transformative learning; underserved populations
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30384820 PMCID: PMC6225432 DOI: 10.1080/10872981.2018.1537431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Examples of students’ self-reported emotions and thoughts during the tour.
| Emotions | Thoughts and observations | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Negative | Defeated | Overwhelmed | ‘Boundaries and blatant injustices faced by residents.’ | ‘While the rest of the city is improving, these communities have been left behind.’ |
| Frustrated | Shocked | |||
| Shame | Humbled | ‘Seeing the prison system in direct line of sight between the community and downtown.’ | ‘I’m not different from these folks, but I’ve had so many more opportunities.’ | |
| Guilt | Trapped | |||
| Disappointed | Surprised | ‘How do you even make a dent in this sort of poverty?’ | ‘We haven’t passed a grocery store! How do people eat?’ | |
| Lonely | Disgust | |||
| Dismayed | Hopeless | ‘We place and concentrate such poverty to let it fester and cause worse conditions.’ | ‘The people/kids are set up for failure.’ | |
| Sad | Heartbreak | |||
| Positive | Inspired | Encouraged | ‘I can see where I can be used to help uplift individuals in these communities.’ | ‘Inspired by development center dedication and persistence.’ |
| Hopeful | Connected | |||
| Curious | Empowered | ‘Hope for future changes.’ | ‘Feeling of potential.’ | |
| Excited | Motivated | |||
Themes and learning outcomes from the community tour as evidenced in students’ self-reflexive writings.
| Themes | Learning outcomes | Sample of student responses |
|---|---|---|
| Awareness of poverty | Increased awareness of the extent and impact of poverty in local communities Recognition of how insulated from poverty medical students typically are | ‘I am amazed at the despair and brokenness located just a few miles from where we live and study, completely unaware of the hardships going on blocks away.’ ‘It amazes me how close these densely disadvantaged communities can be to me without ever interacting with them.’ |
| Critical understanding of how poverty impacts health and wellbeing | Fostered intentional awareness of patients’ perspectives, experiences, and lives at home and in their communities Increased professional sensitivity to how socio-economic barriers undermine patients’ ability to access, engage, and benefit from healthcare services | ‘Reminded again about how complex and difficult it is to improve upon health and poverty.’ ‘I will choose to be more intentionally aware of who my future patients are as individuals and what challenges they face in order to successfully adopt healthy practices. Even what I consider to be the simplest plan or cheapest plan may seem difficult or be insurmountable to those with far less resources and opportunities.’ ‘I learned to never make assumptions about someone’s living conditions, for I may never truly know their home situation or difficulty in simply accessing food, medicine, healthcare, or an education.’ |
| Self-reflexive attitude | Revealed latent feelings and attitudes towards underserved populations Exposed areas of intellectual and experiential ignorance regarding structural inequalities Critically interrogated the goals, benefits, and impact of the healthcare system vis a vis underserved communities Identified areas for further personal and professional growth | ‘I realized how much sadness and compassion I have for people with unfortunate circumstances and how separate that is from pity.’ ‘I learned how little I know about poverty and the reality of what it looks like.’ ‘I may not be as culturally competent as I once thought. I do not understand a lot of the power dynamics or cultural dynamics at play.’ ‘We are probably benefiting more than the people we treat.’ ‘I only understand things at surface level and am constantly surprised and frustrated by its complexity and stagnation.’ |
| Motivation to serve | Spurred proactive stance towards rectifying social injustices Renewed commitment to pursuing careers of medical service Inspired critical engagement with social, political and economic issues outside the immediate purview of clinical medicine | ‘It is not enough to observe the injustice, but we must do what we can to take action to start impacting the people around us.’ ‘It reminded me why I am here. I’m grateful for the opportunity to learn about these broken communities so that I can go out when I am a physician and impact the community as a whole in which I serve.’ ‘I have frequently been plagued by self-doubt throughout medical school, and my belief in my ability to help others has declined secondary to that. But today, there were many moments I thought to myself, “I can do that!”’ ‘I felt an inclination to challenge and question much more strongly than I have before.’ ‘I think it underscores the fact that as people of power we have to consider the impact of our desires in policy on all parts of the city, not only for ourselves. We can’t let ourselves be the reason why neighborhoods like this can’t get better.’ |
| Educational challenges related to transformative learning and medical citizenship | Developing personal ethos of medical citizenship potentially requires extensive experiential education on/in low-income communities Increased understanding of structural inequalities can be demoralizing if not paired with education on how to effect pragmatic solutions Inability to personally identify with underserved populations risks undermining transformative learning experiences Ambivalence towards the healthcare system as both the problem and solution to health care inequalities challenges students’ commitment to pursue careers of medical service | ‘I don’t always see through the eyes of those less fortunate as much as I would like to think that I do. It’s hard to empathize or even have the energy or context of understanding.’ ‘I am not poor, black or even from the eastern states. That puts me so far from being able to help this community.’ ‘I often walk away from these sessions deeply upset because we are often talking about limitations and all the reasons that we may not be able to affect change.’ ‘A sense of “I’m not sure what to do next” sort of hit me time and time again.’ ‘It is hard to decide whether contributing in ways I can to broken systems is helping or hurting in the end.’ |