Global Health Education at Home: Canadian Medical Students' Perspectives After Learning Alongside Haitian Peers.

Acad Med

S.S.L. Liauw is an internal medicine resident, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. A. Kuper is associate professor and faculty co-lead, Person-Centred Care Education, Department of Medicine, scientist and associate director, Wilson Centre for Research in Education, University Health Network, University of Toronto, and staff physician, Division of General Internal Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. G. Noël is associate professor and director, Anatomical Sciences Division, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. L. Richardson is assistant professor, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, and staff physician, Division of General Internal Medicine, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Published: December 2018

Purpose: To explore how host medical students learn from visiting foreign students, by reporting on a global health program that has invited two or three Haitian medical students each year since 2013 to a Canadian medical school for a summer anatomy program.

Method: In 2017, the authors conducted a qualitative descriptive study that collected data through one-on-one, semistructured interviews with 10 Canadian students, who participated in the Université Quisqueya-McGill University collaborative, a bidirectional global health education initiative, 2013-2016. The authors' critical constructivist thematic analysis, while exploratory, was sensitized by their knowledge of contemporary frameworks of global health competencies, a postcolonial understanding of power relations, and three key concepts (agency, cultural humility, and reflexivity).

Results: The authors found two phenomena related to bidirectional exchange: the nature of the relationship between Canadian and Haitian students, and elements of the learning experience that facilitated transformation and growth. There were three important components to the nature of the relationship between Canadian and Haitian students-reflection on practices and privilege, negotiation of power dynamics, and perception of Haitian students as agents-and three components of the learning experience that facilitated transformation and growth-working in groups, common learning objectives, and informal social gatherings.

Conclusions: Bidirectional programs may have implications for Canadian students' perception of the agency of international medical learners and may prompt self-reflection that manifests in a range of ways, including an experience of culture shock at home. These tensions seemed to create space to practice reflexivity and cultural humility.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000002400DOI Listing

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