Pilar Ortega1,2, Nicolás O Francone3, María Paola Santos4, Jorge A Girotti5, Tiffany M Shin6, Nielufar Varjavand7, Yoon Soo Park8. 1. Department of Medical Education, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA. POrtega1@uic.edu. 2. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA. POrtega1@uic.edu. 3. Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA. 4. University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, USA. 5. Department of Medical Education, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA. 6. Department of Pediatrics, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA. 7. Department of Medicine, Office of Global Health Education, Office of Educational Affairs, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 8. Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most medical schools offer medical Spanish education to teach patient-physician communication skills with the growing Spanish-speaking population. Medical Spanish courses that lack basic standards of curricular structure, faculty educators, learner assessment, and institutional credit may increase student confidence without sufficiently improving skills, inadvertently exacerbating communication problems with linguistic minority patients. OBJECTIVE: To conduct a national environmental scan of US medical schools' medical Spanish educational efforts, examine to what extent existing efforts meet basic standards, and identify next steps in improving the quality of medical Spanish education. DESIGN: Data were collected from March to November 2019 using an IRB-exempt online 6-item primary and 14-item secondary survey. PARTICIPANTS: All deans of the Association of American Medical Colleges member US medical schools were invited to complete the primary survey. If a medical Spanish educator or leader was identified, that person was sent the secondary survey. MAIN MEASURES: The presence of medical Spanish educational programs and, when present, whether the programs met four basic standards: formal curricular structure, faculty educator, learner assessment, and course credit. KEY RESULTS: Seventy-nine percent of medical schools (125 out of 158) responded to either or both the primary and/or secondary surveys. Among participating schools, 78% (98/125) of medical schools offered medical Spanish programming; of those, 21% (21/98) met all basic standards. Likelihood of meeting all basic standards did not significantly differ by location, school size, or funding type. Fifty-four percent (53/98) report formal medical Spanish curricula, 69% (68/98) have faculty instructors, 57% (56/98) include post-course assessment, and 31% (30/98) provide course credit. CONCLUSIONS: Recommended next steps for medical schools include formalizing medical Spanish courses as electives or required curricula; hiring and/or training faculty educators; incorporating learner assessment; and granting credit for student course completion. Future studies should evaluate implementation strategies to establish best practice recommendations beyond basic standards.
BACKGROUND: Most medical schools offer medical Spanish education to teach patient-physician communication skills with the growing Spanish-speaking population. Medical Spanish courses that lack basic standards of curricular structure, faculty educators, learner assessment, and institutional credit may increase student confidence without sufficiently improving skills, inadvertently exacerbating communication problems with linguistic minority patients. OBJECTIVE: To conduct a national environmental scan of US medical schools' medical Spanish educational efforts, examine to what extent existing efforts meet basic standards, and identify next steps in improving the quality of medical Spanish education. DESIGN: Data were collected from March to November 2019 using an IRB-exempt online 6-item primary and 14-item secondary survey. PARTICIPANTS: All deans of the Association of American Medical Colleges member US medical schools were invited to complete the primary survey. If a medical Spanish educator or leader was identified, that person was sent the secondary survey. MAIN MEASURES: The presence of medical Spanish educational programs and, when present, whether the programs met four basic standards: formal curricular structure, faculty educator, learner assessment, and course credit. KEY RESULTS: Seventy-nine percent of medical schools (125 out of 158) responded to either or both the primary and/or secondary surveys. Among participating schools, 78% (98/125) of medical schools offered medical Spanish programming; of those, 21% (21/98) met all basic standards. Likelihood of meeting all basic standards did not significantly differ by location, school size, or funding type. Fifty-four percent (53/98) report formal medical Spanish curricula, 69% (68/98) have faculty instructors, 57% (56/98) include post-course assessment, and 31% (30/98) provide course credit. CONCLUSIONS: Recommended next steps for medical schools include formalizing medical Spanish courses as electives or required curricula; hiring and/or training faculty educators; incorporating learner assessment; and granting credit for student course completion. Future studies should evaluate implementation strategies to establish best practice recommendations beyond basic standards.
Authors: Kristen M J Azar; Maria R Moreno; Eric C Wong; Jessica J Shin; Christy Soto; Latha P Palaniappan Journal: Health Serv Res Date: 2011-08-24 Impact factor: 3.402
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