1. Teaching what matters: Integrating health equity education into the core surgery clerkship
- Author
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Cheyenne Williams, Kristin E. Goodsell, Hillary E. Mulvey, Ari D. Brooks, Andrea C. Yeguez, and Olivia O Familusi
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Students, Medical ,Health Equity ,business.industry ,Teaching ,education ,Clinical Clerkship ,Equity (finance) ,Psychological intervention ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Session (web analytics) ,Health equity ,General Surgery ,Family medicine ,Intervention (counseling) ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Surgery ,General knowledge ,Baseline (configuration management) ,business ,Single session ,Education, Medical, Undergraduate - Abstract
BACKGROUND Significant disparities in surgical outcomes exist. It is imperative to prepare future doctors to eliminate disparities. Our team of senior medical students developed a surgical clerkship module examining equity in prostate cancer. Student attitudes before and after a facilitated teaching session were assessed. METHODS A surgical equity pilot module was integrated into the core surgical clerkship starting in July 2020. This module was composed of (1) asynchronous preparatory material and (2) a synchronous interactive case discussion regarding disparities in prostate cancer. Discussion sessions were facilitated by upper-level medical students. Participants answered optional anonymous Likert-style and open-ended survey questions before and after the session. Pre- and post-responses were compared. RESULTS One hundred and sixteen students completed the module between July 2020 and January 2021. Pre- and post-survey response rates were 66% and 29%, respectively. At baseline, almost all students (95%) agreed knowledge of disparities would make them a better physician. However, the majority (95%) described their general knowledge of surgical disparities as "nonexistent," "poor," or "average." Most students did not have a framework for assessing causes of surgical disparities (86%) and were not aware of interventions for reducing disparities (90%). After intervention, the majority rated their knowledge of surgical disparities as "good" or "excellent" (71%; P < .001). Most students indicated they had a framework 79%; P < .001) and were aware of effective interventions (62%; P < .001). CONCLUSION We demonstrated a successful pilot of an equity-focused clerkship module. Student attitudes after a single session reflected significant improvement in knowledge of causes and interventions related to surgical disparities. Equity-focused teaching can be incorporated into the surgical clerkship.
- Published
- 2022
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