Health Disparity Curricula for Ophthalmology Residents: Current Landscape, Barriers, and Needs.

Nicole Carvajal, Justin Lopez, Tessnim R Ahmad, Johsias Maru, Saras Ramanathan, Gerami D Seitzman, Sriranjani Padmanabhan, Neeti Parikh
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Abstract

Background  Social determinants of health play a critical role in visual health outcomes. Yet, there exists no structured curriculum for ophthalmology residents to identify and address health disparities relevant to eye care or no a standard assessment of health disparities education within ophthalmology residency programs. This study aims to characterize current health disparity curricula in ophthalmology residency programs in the United States, determine resident confidence in addressing health disparities in the clinical setting, and identify perceived barriers and needs of program directors (PDs) and residents in this area. Design  This was a cross-sectional survey study. Methods  A closed-ended questionnaire with comments was distributed to the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education-accredited ophthalmology residency PDs and residents in April 2021 and May 2022. The questionnaire solicited characteristics of any existing health disparity curricula, PD and resident perceptions of these curricula, and residents' experience with and confidence in addressing health disparities in the delivery of patient care. Results  In total, 29 PDs and 96 residents responded. Sixty-six percent of PDs stated their program had a formal curriculum compared to fifty-three percent of residents. Forty-one percent of PDs and forty-one percent of residents stated their program places residents in underserved care settings for more than 50% of their training. Most residents (72%) were confident in recognizing health disparities. Sixty-six percent were confident in managing care in the face of disparities and fifty-nine percent felt they know how to utilize available resources. Residents were most concerned with the lack of access to resources to help patients. Forty-five percent of PDs felt the amount of time dedicated to health disparities education was adequate. Forty-nine percent of residents reported they felt the amount of training they received on health disparities to be adequate. The top barrier to curriculum development identified by PDs was the availability of trained faculty to teach. Time in the curriculum was a major barrier identified by residents. Conclusions  Roughly half of ophthalmology residency programs who responded had a health disparity curriculum; however, both PDs and residents felt inadequate time is dedicated to such education. National guidance on structured health disparity curricula for ophthalmology residents may be warranted as a next step.

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眼科住院医师的健康差异课程:现状、障碍和需求。
健康的社会决定因素在视觉健康结果中起着关键作用。然而,目前还没有针对眼科住院医师的结构化课程来识别和解决与眼保健相关的健康差异,或者在眼科住院医师项目中没有对健康差异教育的标准评估。本研究旨在描述目前美国眼科住院医师项目的健康差异课程,确定住院医师在解决临床环境中的健康差异方面的信心,并确定该领域项目主任(pd)和住院医师的感知障碍和需求。设计本研究为横断面调查研究。方法于2021年4月和2022年5月向美国研究生医学教育认证委员会认可的眼科住院医师和住院医师发放封闭式问卷。问卷询问了现有健康差异课程的特点,PD和住院医生对这些课程的看法,以及住院医生在解决患者护理中健康差异的经验和信心。结果共有29名pd和96名居民回应。66%的pd表示他们的项目有正式的课程,而只有53%的住院医师这么认为。41%的医生和41%的住院医生表示,他们的项目让住院医生在服务不足的医疗机构接受了超过50%的培训。大多数居民(72%)有信心认识到健康差距。66%的人对面对差异的护理管理有信心,59%的人认为他们知道如何利用现有资源。居民们最关心的是缺乏资源来帮助病人。45%的pd认为用于健康差异教育的时间是足够的。49%的居民报告说,他们认为他们接受的关于健康差异的培训数量是足够的。博士们认为,课程开发的最大障碍是缺乏训练有素的教师。课程中的时间是居民们认为的主要障碍。结论:大约一半的眼科住院医师项目有健康差异课程;然而,警察和居民都认为没有足够的时间用于这种教育。下一步可能需要制定针对眼科住院医师的结构化健康差异课程的国家指南。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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