医学生的少数族裔税:文献综述与缓解建议

Renée M. Betancourt, Donna Baluchi, Kristina Dortche, Kendall M Campbell, José E. Rodríguez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景与目标:医学博士和医学博士授予机构的评审标准要求医学院招收多元化的学生,并对学生进行有关不同患者群体的教育。少数群体税是分配给种族和民族代表性不足的教职员工的责任摘要,目的是在其典型的学术工作量之外,实现医疗机构的多样性、公平性和包容性。本文对医学生的少数族裔税经历进行了叙述性回顾,并就医学教育者如何通过消除少数族裔税来支持公平的学习环境提出了建议:我们搜索了 PubMed、Web of Science 和 Scopus 数据库、Google Scholar 以及医学会网站、博客和论坛,搜索词条包括少数族裔税、医学生和本科医学教育。如果出版物讨论了在医学界代表人数不足的医学生在少数族裔税方面的经历,我们就将其收录其中:我们的搜索结果包括 6 篇经同行评审的原创研究文章和 6 篇评论、观点文章或新闻报道。与非代表性不足的学生相比,在医学领域代表性不足的学生在多元化工作上花费的时间更长;此外,学生们表示,为了履行这些额外的多元化职责,他们不得不牺牲学业成绩:结论:医科学生中的少数族裔税构成了职业晋升的不公平和不公正的障碍,它很可能是医学学术教师队伍中代表性不足的学生流失的早期原因。医学教育工作者可以提出具体建议,消除或减轻医学生的少数族裔税。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Minority Tax on Medical Students: A Review of the Literature and Mitigation Recommendations
Background and Objectives: Accreditation standards for MD- and DO-granting institutions require medical schools to recruit a diverse student body and educate students about diverse groups of patients. The minority tax is a summary of responsibilities assigned to racial and ethnic underrepresented faculty to achieve diversity, equity, and inclusion in medical institutions in addition to their typical academic workload. This article provides a narrative review of medical students’ experiences of the minority tax and recommendations on how medical educators can support an equitable learning environment by eliminating the minority tax. Methods: We searched the PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus databases, Google Scholar, and medical society websites, blogs, and fora for terms, including minority tax, medical students, and undergraduate medical education. We included publications if they discussed the underrepresented in medicine medical students’ experiences of the minority tax. Results: Our search yielded six peer-reviewed original research articles and six publications of commentaries, opinion pieces, or news pieces. Students who were underrepresented in medicine reported spending more hours on diversity efforts compared with students who were not underrepresented; moreover, students reported that they had to sacrifice academic excellence in order to fulfill these additional diversity duties. Conclusions: The minority tax among medical students constitutes an unequitable and unjust barrier to career advancement, and it likely represents an early cause of attrition in the pipeline of underrepresented in medicine academic faculty. Medical educators can enact specific recommendations to eliminate or mitigate the minority tax experience for medical students.
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