| Literature DB >> 35578195 |
Douglas Gruner1, Yael Feinberg2, Maddie J Venables3, Syeda Shanza Hashmi2,4, Ammar Saad5, Douglas Archibald3,6, Kevin Pottie3,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: International migration, especially forced migration, highlights important medical training needs including cross-cultural communication, human rights, as well as global health competencies for physical and mental healthcare. This paper responds to the call for a 'trauma informed' refugee health curriculum framework from medical students and global health faculty.Entities:
Keywords: Cultural competence; Cultural safety; Disease prevention; Refugees and migrants; Social accountability; Undergraduate medical education framework
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35578195 PMCID: PMC9109444 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-022-03413-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 3.263
Fig. 1Logic Model of Refugee Health Curriculum Framework Mixed-Methods Development
Fig. 2Emerging themes from interviews with faculty concerning undergraduate refugee health curriculum in Canada
Educational content present in the various university curriculum
| Content description | No. of universities (n = 14) |
|---|---|
| Epidemiology/demographics of refugees and immigrants new to Canada | 11 |
| Barriers refugees and immigrants face when accessing care | 13 |
| Challenges and pitfalls of providing care to refugees and immigrants | 11 |
| Refugee and immigrant support services in the community | 11 |
| Collaborating with allied health, settlement staff and lawyers when providing care to newcomers to Canada | 8 |
| Communication skills, cultural and ethical issues when dealing with refugee and immigrant populations (including working with interpreters) | 12 |
| Vaccination and screening newly arrived refugees and immigrants for infectious diseases in children and adults | 9 |
| Mental health of refugee and immigrant populations (posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, adjustment disorders) | 9 |
| Reproductive health in refugee and immigrant populations (contraception, pregnancy care, female genital mutilation, intimate partner violence etc.,) | 5 |
| Managing chronic non-communicable diseases in refugee and immigrant adults (cancer screening, diabetes screening, cardiovascular disease screening, etc.,) | 8 |
| Managing chronic non-communicable diseases in refugee and immigrant children (Oral health, vision care, malnutrition, hereditary anemias, etc.,) | 5 |
| Demonstrate basic understanding between health and human rights | 7 |
| Social determinants affecting health of refugee populations | 12 |
| Being aware of boundary issues that can come up with refugee and vulnerable populations | 5 |
Methods of content delivery mentioned in the university survey responses
| Large group lectures | 12 |
| Small group workshops | 7 |
| Electronic/internet tools such as e-learning modules | 3 |
| Teaching sessions with standardized patients | 2 |
| Portfolio/self-reflection guide | 0 |
| Pre-clerkship exposures (settlement agency placements, etc.) | 8 |
| Clerkship exposures (core rotations working with refugee or immigrant populations, etc.,) | 4 |
Primary Learning Topics. By the end of the undergraduate medical training a student will be able to
| Understand the importance and need to offer culturally safe and competent healthcare in a trauma informed manner |
| Communicate effectively across cultures with humility and openness |
| Explore the issues related to the care of refugees including screening for infectious and chronic illness, prevention and promotion of health including mental health and women’s health |
| Review the demographics related to refugees and migrant patient populations |
| Identify the social determinants of health which create barriers for refugees and migrants when accessing health care |
| Understand the importance of a collaborative team-based approach including being aware of the various support services available to refugees and migrants in the community |
| Reflect on personal bias and knowledge gaps, while showing respect for cultural and gender diversity of the patient population |
Secondary Learning Topics. In addition to adopting primary topics, medical learners may also be able to
| Learn from and work collaboratively with interpreters and settlement workers |
| Acknowledge challenges in providing care for refugee and migrant populations and continuously work towards overcoming such challenges |
| Obtain updated information on pertinent information from refugee health and policy, as well as understand how they may impact care |
| Offer referral services for refugee and migrant families who may require additional counselling and psychological based services |
| Describe the various resources in the community to support refugees with the aim to improve health outcomes |
| Understand local vaccination guidelines and approaches for refugees and migrants |
| Develop an appreciation for how to advocate for refugee clients with letter writing including supporting legal, social and personal needs, including housing, literacy, and citizenship |
| Gain an understanding of health equity and how system level changes led by socially accountable physicians can lead to improved health outcomes for refugees and migrants |
| Identify key patient centered factors when reviewing the latest refugee and migrant specific evidence-based guidelines |
Values and Principles to Guide the Curriculum Framework (Redwood Campbell 2009)
| Social justice | fair and impartial access to the benefits of society including the right to health |
| Sustainability | living and working within the limits of available physical, natural and social resources in ways that allow living systems to thrive in perpetuity |
| Reciprocity | multidirectional sharing and exchange of experience and knowledge among collaborating partners |
| Respect | for the history, context, values and cultures of communities with whom we engage |
| Honesty and openness | in planning and implementation of all collaborations |
| Humility | in recognizing our own values, biases, limitations, and abilities |
| Responsiveness and accountability | to students and faculty and diverse communities with whom we are involved |
| Equity | promoting the just distribution of resources and access, especially with respect to marginalized and vulnerable groups |
| Solidarity | ensuring that objectives are aligned with those of the communities with which we are working |
Refugee Health Competency-Based Learning Objectives. The learner engaged in refugee and migrant health will be able to
| Expert | Establish therapeutic, patient centered rapport and understand the importance of delivering comprehensive evidence-based care that is specific to the needs of refugee and migrant populations |
| Communicator | Communicate with refugee and migrant patient populations and identify student inherent bias’ and address relevant gaps such as language barriers, differing cultural perspectives, and health literacy |
| Use a ‘trauma informed care’ approach when addressing disease screening and prevention strategies | |
| Collaborator | Practice a collaborative team-based approach, including establishing positive working relationships with other health care professionals, medical interpreters and community leaders, including legal, religious and cultural representatives |
| Leader | Describe various trauma informed approaches to improve cultural safety (choice, collaboration, trustworthiness and empowerment), evidence based clinical care and constant quality improvement for refugee and migrant clinical care |
| Health Advocate | Identify the social determinants of health and barriers to culturally appropriate care affecting refugee and migrant patients |
| Describe the various resources in the community to support refugees with the aim to improve health outcomes | |
| Gain an understanding of health equity and how system level changes led by socially accountable physicians can lead to improved health outcomes for refugees and migrants | |
| Professional | Show respect for, and knowledge of, the demographic and cultural and gender diversity of their patient population |
| Reflect on their own bias and knowledge gaps pertaining to the unique needs and barriers refugee and migrant patient populations face when accessing healthcare | |
| Scholar | Identify key patient-centered factors when reviewing the latest refugee and migrant evidence-based clinical prevention guidelines |
Fig. 3Refugee Health Curriculum Framework. Outer shell: values and principles, inner shell: learning methods, innermost shell: core refugee health competencies (see Table 4)