| Literature DB >> 30988957 |
D Ashley Watson1, Nicholas Cooling2, Ian J Woolley3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Thousands of medical students undertake international medical electives each year. These students face potentially substantial health and safety risks as well as educational and ethical challenges and therefore should undertake their electives within well-structured and coordinated programs.Entities:
Keywords: Ethics; Global; Occupational; Risk; Travel
Year: 2019 PMID: 30988957 PMCID: PMC6448218 DOI: 10.1186/s40794-019-0081-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines ISSN: 2055-0936
Fig. 1Component definition of the research question [79]
Existing guidelines relevant to international medical electives
| Guideline | Region | Year | Text & Expert Opinion CAT score [ | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFMC Global Health Resource Group: Preparing medical students for electives in low resource settings: a template for national guidelines for pre-departure training [ | Canada | 2008 | 6 | Grey literature; 10 years old; Comprehensive but does not separate faculty & student recommendations & responsibilities. |
| WEIGHT: Ethics and best practice guidelines for training experiences in global health [ | International | 2010 | 6 | Very comprehensive; Expert working group; Not specifically aimed at medical student electives or program coordinators. |
| General Medical Council: Clinical placements for medical students [ | UK | 2011 | 6 | Grey literature; Generic document for all clinical placements. |
| A guide to working abroad for medical students and junior doctors [ | Australia | 2011 | 5 | Very broad and approachable document written by the lead doctors and students organisations of Australia. Uses many casestudies and largely focussed on humanitarian and service electives. |
| Guidelines for safety of trainees rotating abroad: consensus recommendations from the Global Emergency Medicine Academy of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, Council of Emergency Medicine, Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors, and the Emergency Medicine Residents’ Association [ | U.S.A. | 2013 | 6 | Comprehensive; Aimed at emergency medicine electives (students & residents); Emphasis on personal safety. |
| AMEE Guide No. 88: Electives in undergraduate medical education [ | UK | 2014 | 6 | Comprehensive review; Easily readable narrative & examples; Does not separate faculty & student recommendations. |
| Australian Outbound Student Mobility: Quality dimensions for international fieldwork in health sciences [ | Australia | 2015 | 5 | Grey literature; very broad-based - aimed at general higher-education audience; Many good-practice examples. |
| WMA Statement on Ethical Considerations in Global Medical Electives [ | International | 2016 | 5 | Grey literature; Short statement on key ethical issues. |
| Preparing for International Health Experiences: a practical guide [ | North America | 2017 | 5 | Commercially published book; Aimed at travelling healthcare workers; Not written specifically for program coordinators. |
| Global Health: Preparation for Working in Resource-Limited Settings [ | U.S.A. | 2017 | 5 | Comprehensive thematic approach; Not specifically aimed at program coordinators. |
| Recommendations for undergraduate medical electives: a UK consensus statement [ | U.K. | 2018 | 6 | Aimed at all types of electives, including local placements; Comprehensive, although little detail on health & safety risks. |
| Working in global health: A planning and implementation framework for international electives [ | Australia | 2018 | 5 | Written by two medical students and an academic supervisor; Provides a checklist of recommendations with an emphasis on social accountability. |
Recommendations for implementation by medical student elective program coordinators
| Issue | Recommendation | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Responsibilities | Determine those issues that are the responsibility of the Medical School and distinguish from those that are the responsibilities of students. Inform students of their responsibilities (Table | [ |
| Consider creating a detailed webpage for the program, to be kept up-to-date and embedded with an institutional site. | [ | |
| Assess all elective applications on the basis of personal risk and educational merit. | [ | |
| Develop a range of enduring elective destinations including the establishment of strong and mutually beneficial partnerships with international organizations, universities and health care providers. | [ | |
| Site visits to host institutions to provide quality assurance in academic standards and ethics, based on context and partnership agreements | [ | |
| General Policies | Provide students with policies on electives, including choices of destination country and clinical experiences. | [ |
| Provide students with guidelines on health and safety on electives. | [ | |
| Inform students of medical indemnity, public liability and personal protection insurance provisions for electives. | [ | |
| Policies should be created in collaboration with host institutions, particularly where formal partnerships are being forged | [ | |
| Policies need to be implemented and a degree of compliance achieved by both elective program coordinators and students. | [ | |
| Travel advisories | Consider elective destinations in the light of national travel advisories and be prepared to deal with unexpected changes in risk status. | [ |
| Ensure that students travelling to higher-risk destinations have sought pre-travel health advice and have purchased travel insurance. | [ | |
| Instruct students to register with institutional travel registries. | [ | |
| Provide students with 24-h faculty contact for urgent issues. | [ | |
| Occupational risk assessment | Consider providing travel doctors with information on occupational risk management in electives. | [ |
| Establish policies on HIV PEP, including supply and funding. | [ | |
| Pre-departure training programs | Ensure that pre-departure training is provided for students, covering educational outcomes, clinical experiences, ethics and social accountability, occupational risk management, health and safety. | [ |
| Reinforce learning from training modules with pertinent and enlightening reading material from peer-reviewed literature on international medical electives. | [ | |
| Ensure that experienced faculty play a central role in planning and implementing training sessions to ensure quality and sustainability. | [ | |
| Include procedural skills in pre-departure training. | [ | |
| Funding and finances | Ensure that students are aware of the approximate costs of electives, including the need to budget for travel insurance and vaccinations. | [ |
| Inform students of bursaries, scholarships and other funding support that may be available. | [ | |
| Sending organisations and students should consider funding host institutions to compensate for resources used during the placement and to develop the host institution | [ | |
| Post-return debriefing and screening | Ensure that students are offered post-elective debriefing sessions. Consider providing travel doctors with information on post-return health screening. | [ |
| Encourage students to reflect on their elective experience through reflective writing, discussion groups or academic debriefing. | [ | |
| Seek feedback from host institutions on both individual students and broader programmatic issues. | [ |
Recommendations for implementation by students undertaking medical electives
| Issue | Responsibility | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| General | Participate in pre-departure training and post-return debriefing programs | [ |
| Funding and Finances | Ensure adequate funds for airfares, accommodation, comprehensive travel insurance, daily living expenses, vaccinations and medications, visas, placement fees, recreational activities. | [ |
| Establish the means by which HIV post-exposure prophylaxis (if required) will be prescribed and funded. | [ | |
| Clinical Routine | Establish contact with the designated supervisor and ascertain details of the elective program, clinical experience required and level of supervision. | [ |
| Be aware of skills gaps that may be addressed prior to departure and that should be acknowledged as such during the elective. | [ | |
| Become familiar with syndromic approaches to management of common and important conditions in host country. | [ | |
| Accommodation and Personal Safety | Consider undertaking the elective with another student. | [ |
| Confirm the availability of secure and screened accommodation; determine whether guards and/or domestic help are provided. | [ | |
| Be streetwise when ‘out and about’; seek advice from hosts and inform supervisors of local travel plans. Undertake sufficient planning for and exercise caution when travelling by vehicle; avoid riding motorcycles. | [ | |
| Uphold high standards of clinical practice; seek advice and support from colleagues when dealing with ‘difficult’ patients. | [ | |
| Register with institutional and government travel registries prior to departure. | [ | |
| Ethical Behaviour and Social Accountability | Perceive the elective experience as that of a privileged visitor in a welcoming host community, value clinical cultures, respect social norms, work on language skills, and adapt attitudes and behaviour accordingly. | [ |
| Dress modestly and respectfully; observe standards of clinical attire. | [ | |
| Undertake an institutional and/or on-line training program in global health ethics. | [ | |
| Health and Wellbeing | Ensure that adequate pre-travel health and safety advice, including necessary vaccines and medications, and appropriate preventative behaviour education (i.e. mosquito avoidance, safe sex) is obtained in a timely manner from a travel doctor. Pack a supply of non-sterile gloves, goggles and N-95 masks. Ensure that chronic medical conditions (including mental health conditions) are optimally controlled and that a management plan is in place for exacerbations. Arrange a pre-travel dental check-up. | [ |
| Be competent in the self-management of minor illnesses and injuries, as well as recognition of symptoms of potentially serious illnesses. | [ | |
| Know how and where to access affordable local medical care, including services aimed specifically at foreigners. Keep all receipts and promptly notify travel insurance providers of all incidents and consultations. | [ | |
| In the event of significant illness or injury, seek the support and companionship of another student; notify the program coordinator or other faculty member. | [ |
Recommendations for travel doctors undertaking occupational risk management for medical electives
| Issue | Recommendation | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| General | Advise students that occupational risks are accentuated by various factors, including greater demands and opportunities to perform invasive procedures, poorly resourced work areas, lack of personal protective equipment, fatigue from activities, and often greater caseloads compared with prior experiences in home institutions. | [ |
| Tuberculosis | Inform students that tuberculosis (TB) is common in lower income countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, Papua New Guinea, and the poorer regions of Asia and South America. Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is a notable emerging threat. Medical students are commonly exposed to TB while on their medical electives. | [ |
| Educate students on modes of transmission of TB and minimisation of exposure risk, particularly through the wearing of high-filtration masks. Enlighten students about potential obstacles to risk avoidance, including lack of adequately ventilated rooms, delays in suspected case identification, limited diagnostic facilities, reluctance to wear masks, limited resources for directly observed therapy, and reliance on passive case finding. | [ | |
| Undertake baseline testing for latent TB infection prior to departure (interferon gamma release assay or tuberculin skin testing). | [ | |
| Consider BCG vaccination in students not previously vaccinated, especially if working in TB wards in countries with high rates of multidrug or extended-drug-resistant TB. | [ | |
| Recommend follow-up testing for TB infection 8–12 weeks after return. The object of testing is to identify and treat students who have been recently infected and who are thus at significant risk of progression to clinical disease. | [ | |
| Blood-Borne Viruses | Ensure that students are aware that blood-borne viruses are common in many elective destinations and that occupational exposures occur in elective students. Students should be aware of their own HIV, HBV and HCV serological status (including proven immunity to hepatitis B) and should know the principles of risk management when performing invasive procedures. | [ |
| Expect all sharps injuries to be managed according to guidelines, including cleansing of the wound, incident reporting and documenting, baseline testing of source patients and exposed persons, consideration of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) and follow-up serological testing. | [ | |
| Ensure that PEP for HIV infection is available to students where the risk of occupational exposure is significant. Students must be prepared to make quick decisions regarding empiric commencement of PEP – ideally within two hours of any incident. Consider PrEP for higher risk situations. | [ | |
| Ensure that students have been vaccinated against hepatitis B unless naturally immune or already chronically infected. Students who are uncertain about their hepatitis B serostatus should be tested. | [ | |
| Personal violence | Ensure that students are aware of the risk of personal violence in clinical settings. Advise students to remain vigilant at all times for the warning signs of patient distress and aggressive behaviour. Inform students that they must withdraw from potentially violent situations and seek immediate advice and support from colleagues and supervisors. | [ |
| Other Diseases | Given the typically short duration and high stakes nature of electives, encourage a high degree of vigilance to minimize the risk of food and water-borne diseases. | [ |
| Recommend vaccination against hepatitis A unless vaccinated or proven to be immune from natural infection. | [ | |
| Consider vaccination against typhoid fever, the actual risk of infection varying somewhat from region to region. | [ | |
| Consider cholera vaccination if travelling to areas affected by humanitarian crises or notable high-risk regions. The vaccine may also afford cross-protection against traveller’s diarrhoea due to enterotoxigenic | [ | |
| Ensure up-to-date vaccination against influenza, varicella, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, measles, mumps, rubella and poliomyelitis. | [ | |
| Consider vaccination against meningococcal disease, owing to potential exposure to clinical cases and likely exposure to new serotypes in the general community. Essential for students travelling to the ‘meningitis belt’ of equatorial Africa. | [ | |
| Ensure guidelines for prevention of other exotic diseases are followed, including those for arboviral and other mosquito-borne (particularly yellow fever, Ebola, dengue, Zika and malaria) and rabies. | [ | |
| Emotional wellbeing | Recognize risk factors for emotional distress include travelling alone, prior mental illness, low levels of resilience, insufficient pre-departure training and perceived or actual lack of support during the elective. Adequate preparation, in-country support and post-return debriefing are likely to reduce emotional distress arising from situations experienced on an elective. | [ |
Fig. 2Shared responsibilities to achieving a safe, healthy and effective learning elective