Exploring a case for education about sexual and gender minorities in postgraduate emergency medicine training: forming recommendations for change.

IF 2.6 4区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Adam Burcheri, Alexandre Coutin, Blair L Bigham, Michael I Kruse, Kelly Lien, Rodrick Lim, Hilary MacCormick, Judy Morris, Victor Ng, Nadia Primiani, Scott Odorizzi, Vincent Poirier, Suneel Upadhye, Robert Primavesi
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Social medicine and health advocacy curricula are known to be uncommon in postgraduate medical education. As justice movements work to unveil the systemic barriers experienced by sexual and gender minority (SGM) populations, it is imperative that the emergency medicine (EM) community progress in its efforts to provide equitable, accessible, and competent care for these vulnerable groups. Given the paucity of literature on this subject in the context of EM in Canada, this commentary borrows evidence from other specialties across North America. Trainees across specialties and of all stages are caring for an increasing number of SGM patients. Lack of education at all levels of training is identified as a significant barrier to adequately caring for these populations, thereby precipitating significant health disparities. Cultural competency is often mistakenly attributed to a willingness to treat rather than the provision of quality care. However, positive attitudes do not necessarily correlate with trainee knowledge. Barriers to creating and implementing culturally competent curricula are plentiful, yet facilitating policies and resources are rare. While international bodies continuously publish position statements and calls to action, concrete change is seldom made. The scarcity of SGM curricula can be attributed to the universal absence of formal acknowledgment of SGM health as a required competency by accreditation boards and professional membership associations. This commentary synthesizes hand-picked literature in an attempt to inform healthcare professionals on their journey toward developing culturally competent postgraduate medical education. By thematically organizing evidence into a stepwise approach, the goal of this article is to borrow ideas across medical and surgical specialties to inform the creation of recommendations and make a case for an SGM curriculum for EM programs in Canada.

探讨在研究生急诊医学培训中对性和性别少数群体进行教育的案例:形成变革建议。
众所周知,社会医学和健康宣传课程在研究生医学教育中并不常见。随着司法运动努力揭示性和性别少数群体(SGM)人群所经历的系统性障碍,急诊医学(EM)社区必须在努力为这些弱势群体提供公平、可获得和合格的护理方面取得进展。鉴于在加拿大的EM背景下缺乏关于这一主题的文献,本评论借鉴了北美其他专业的证据。各个专业和各个阶段的受训者都在照顾越来越多的SGM患者。在各级培训中缺乏教育被认为是对这些人口给予充分照顾的一个重大障碍,从而造成了巨大的健康差距。文化能力常常被错误地归因于治疗的意愿,而不是提供高质量的护理。然而,积极的态度并不一定与受训人员的知识相关。创建和实施具有文化能力的课程的障碍很多,但促进政策和资源却很少。虽然国际机构不断发表立场声明和呼吁采取行动,但很少有具体的改变。SGM课程的缺乏可归因于认证委员会和专业会员协会普遍没有正式承认SGM健康是一项必要的能力。这篇评论综合了精挑细选的文献,试图告知医疗保健专业人员在他们的旅程中发展具有文化能力的研究生医学教育。通过将证据按主题组织成循序渐进的方法,本文的目标是借鉴医学和外科专业的想法,为建议的创建提供信息,并为加拿大EM项目的SGM课程提供案例。
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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来源期刊
Postgraduate Medicine
Postgraduate Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
2.40%
发文量
110
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Postgraduate Medicine is a rapid peer-reviewed medical journal published for physicians. Tracing its roots back to 1916,  Postgraduate Medicine  was established by Charles Mayo, MD, as a peer-to-peer method of communicating the latest research to aid physicians when making treatment decisions, and it maintains that aim to this day. In addition to its core subscriber base, Postgraduate Medicine is distributed to hundreds of US-based physicians within internal medicine and family practice.
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