| Literature DB >> 32766194 |
Seema Biswas1, Nathan T Douthit2,1, Keren Mazuz3, Zach Morrison4, Devin Patchell5, Michael Ochion6, Leslie Eidelman7, Agneta Golan8,9, Michael Alkan10,11,12, Tzvi Dwolatzky13, John Norcini14,15, Igor Waksman16,17, Evgeny Solomonov17,18, A Mark Clarfield19,20,21.
Abstract
Background: A growing number of medical schools across the world have incorporated global health (GH) into their curricula. While several schools focus GH education on lecture-based courses, our premise is that global health education should embody a holistic approach to patient care and medical education in local communities. Medical students may learn global health by focusing on real patients, their families and communities as part of a practical curriculum. Aims andEntities:
Keywords: global health; global health competencies; medical education in the community; patient-centered curriculum; social determinants of health
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32766194 PMCID: PMC7379171 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.00283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
MSIH global health core competencies.
| 1. The history of global health | a. Understand the history of global health and the public health interventions that have led to the current state of world health |
| 2. Global health organization and efforts | a. Understand the history, current role, and efforts of the major global health organizations |
| 3. Health Systems | a. Understand the various structures of healthcare systems |
| 4. Health economics | a. Understand major financing methods for health care and global health efforts |
| 5. Health policy | a. Understand how health policies are made and implemented |
| 6. Politics | a. Understand the importance of local and international politics in the delivery and efficacy of global health and medicine |
| 1. Determinants of health | a. Understand why it is important to measure health and disease |
| 2. Global patterns of morbidity and mortality | a. Understand the attributes of morbidity and mortality as they apply to the burden of disease |
| 3. Epidemiology, biostatistics, and surveillance | a. Understand the measures of morbidity and mortality as they are used globally |
| 4. Infectious and chronic disease | a. Infectious Disease |
| 5. Environmental health | a. Understand how the geography and climate of a region can impact human health |
| 1. Cultural sensitivity | a. Understand and appreciate the role that culture plays in the practice of medicine and global health |
| 2. Medical anthropology | a. Understand the practice and theory of medical anthropology and its role in global health and medicine |
| 3. Local diplomacy | a. Gain tools to function within foreign healthcare systems and with different patient populations, governments, and colleagues |
| 4. Language skills | a. Appreciate the importance of language in the practice of medicine and global health |
| 1. Maternal and child health | a. Describe the social and economic context of maternal and child health |
| 2. Disasters, displaced persons, refugees, and terrorism | a. Understand the principles and laws governing international humanitarian assistance |
| 3. Aging populations | a. Develop an overview of the demography of global aging and its relationship to non-communicable diseases |
| 4. Mental health | a. Describe the epidemiology and impact of mental health issues on populations |
| 5. Poverty | a. Understand how poverty can affect health and how health problems can result in poverty |
| 1. Primary care in global health | a. Define primary care and understand the way in which it is defined and practiced in different cultures and health systems |
| 2. Preventive medicine | a. Understand the role physicians can play in preventing illness in individuals and populations |
| 3. Global pediatrics | a. Understand the unique health needs of infants, children and adolescents, and role of the physician in treating these needs |
| 4. Sexual and reproductive health | a. Understand the unique health conditions and social issues associated with sexual activity and reproduction and the role of the physician in mediating these issues |
| 5. Access to essential medicines | a. Understand the current definition and suggested list of essential medications as defined by the WHO and Doctors Without Borders |
| 1. Research ethics | a. Know the history and evolution of the field of health research ethics (e.g., Nuremberg, Tuskegee, etc.) |
| 2. Clinical decision-making in low resource settings | a. Describe ethical issues in health resource allocation |
| 3. Global health equity | a. Describe the meaning of the “right to health” and understand the concept of social justice as it relates to global health |
| 4. Equity in knowledge sharing: open-access and open source resources | a. Understand the ethical reasoning for open source resources |
| 5. Advocacy and community consultation/participation | a. Understand the concept of solidarity as it applies to global medical practice |
| 6. Human rights | a. Know the basic documents pertaining to global human rights and keep abreast of new developments in the field |
Figure 1Global health learning outcomes identified in literature reviews and case reports.
Learning objectives achieved in our practical curriculum.
| Knowledge and understanding | Knowledge of local history, culture, social structure, politics | Tour of local community with annotated photographs |
| Skills | Communication and linguistic skills | Learning the patients' language to communicate more effectively with patients |
| Attitude | Curiosity | “We need to learn more about the Enneagram personality test for our next meeting (one of her interests)” |
Student placements for Groups B and C.
| Families | 12 | 26 |
| Refugee clinic | 8 | 0 |
| Assisted living facilities | 0 | 4 |
| Specialist hospital units | 9 | 0 |
| Community center | 0 | 2 |
| Local NGO | 0 | 2 |
Figure 2Field journal layout (Group C).
Figure 3Family Health Needs Assessment Tool [adapted from the WHO family health assessment tool (47)] (Group C).
Figure 4Field journal analysis (Group C).
Figure 5Student strategies in interacting with patients and self-directed learning on placement (Group C).
Figure 6Generation of global health problem list and problem analysis (Group C).
Quotations from student field journals and the FNAT.
| “We hope to build foundations for a trusting series of meetings” |
| “We learned about organisations with which he has been in contact for support with his disease” |
| “We talked for about two hours about the circumstances of her life: how she came to live here, what her professional life had been like before her retirement, how she felt about her life now” |
| “We wanted to ask him more about his limitations due to his disease” |
| “When speaking of his disease he seems defeated” |
| “We were able to learn more about her family and see how she interacts with them” |
| “After having a number of problems and mix-ups involving correspondence with this agency, she worries that one day an approval will not go through and she will be forced to endure potentially severe withdrawal symptoms from not being able to renew her medication on time.” |
Student activities with families (according to field journals).
| Cooking together | 22% |
| Eating together | 88% |
| Watching TV | 22% |
| Music | 46% |
| Playing cards | 22% |
| Playing board games | 46% |
| Arts and crafts together | 22% |
| Finding out how to help with disease management | 100% |
| Touring town together | 88% |
| Looking through family album | 22% |
| Attending doctors' appointments | 68% |
| Setting up computers | 22% |
| Learning Hebrew | 68% |
| Exercise | 68% |