| Literature DB >> 32520750 |
Sam Schuiteman1, Nadine I Ibrahim2, Ali Hammoud3, Laura Kruger4, Rajesh S Mangrulkar5, Michelle Daniel6.
Abstract
The COVID-19 outbreak has sown clinical and administrative chaos at academic health centers throughout the country. As COVID-19-related burdens on the health care system and medical schools piled up, questions from medical students far outweighed the capacity of medical school administrators to respond in an adequate or timely manner, leaving students feeling confused and without clear guidance. In this article, incoming and outgoing executive leaders of the University of Michigan Medical School Student Council and medical school deans outline the specific ways they were able to bridge the gap between medical students and administrators in a time of crisis. To illustrate the value of student government during uncertain times, the authors identify the most pressing problems faced by students at each phase of the curriculum-preclerkship, clerkship, and postclerkship-and explain how Student Council leadership partnered with administrators to find creative solutions to these problems and provide guidance to learners. They end by reflecting on the role of student government more broadly, identifying 3 guiding principles of student leadership and how these principles enable effective student representation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 32520750 PMCID: PMC7302065 DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000003542
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acad Med ISSN: 1040-2446 Impact factor: 7.840
Figure 1University of Michigan Medical School Medical Student Council organizational chart. All representatives are elected by their respective classes. Each month, each class meets individually to identify issues before the class. These are discussed at a meeting of all student representatives, and specific issues are then brought forward at a monthly luncheon with medical school administrators. Abbreviations: M1, first-year student; M2, second-year student; M3, third-year student; M4, fourth-year student; LETF, Learning Environment Task Force; MSTP, Medical Scientist Training Program; M-Home, Medical School Home, the UMMS house-based longitudinal learning communities.
Figure 2University of Michigan Medical School Student Council monthly structure. In a typical month, each class meets individually to identify class-specific issues. These are brought to a meeting of all members of Student Council, where general issues and class-specific issues are discussed and solutions proposed. Finally, some members of Student Council present the issues and potential solutions to a monthly luncheon with medical school administrators. Abbreviations: M1, first-year student; M2, second-year student; M3, third-year student; M4, fourth-year student; MSTP, Medical Scientist Training Program; M-Home, Medical School Home, the UMMS house-based longitudinal learning communities; LETF, Learning Environment Task Force.