Suspending Student Selections to Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society: How One School Is Navigating the Intersection of Equity and Wellness.

Acad Med

G. Lynch was a fourth-year medical student, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York, at the time this was written. She is now a first-year preliminary internal medicine resident, Morristown Medical Center, Morristown, New Jersey. T. Holloway is a second-year psychiatry resident, Yale-New Haven Medical Center Program and Yale Neuroscience Research Training Program, New Haven, Connecticut. D. Muller is dean for medical education, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York. A.-G. Palermo is associate dean for diversity and inclusion in biomedical education, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.

Published: May 2020

Medical education must provide students with a delicate balance of academic rigor, equity, and wellness. While the medical education community espouses all these values, the authors believe the way medical students are evaluated and rewarded undermines equity and wellness. Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society (AΩA) membership is arguably the highest honor that a medical student can achieve. In the short term, it opens doors to the most selective training opportunities, and in the long term, ushers students into an elite group of future physician leaders. Yet recent data have demonstrated that AΩA is disproportionately awarded to white students.At Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (ISMMS), the authors observed that students underrepresented in science and medicine were persistently underrepresented among those selected for AΩA. They describe efforts at ISMMS to reduce bias in the selection process and the ultimate decision to suspend medical student selection for AΩA altogether. The authors argue that selection to AΩA reinforces the structural biases and social privilege that are embedded in medical education and undermines the ability to deliver an educational experience that has as its core tenets equity and wellness. Suspending participation in student selection for AΩA is an important step toward recognizing that medical school learning environments continue to privilege white students over students who are underrepresented in medicine.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000003087DOI Listing

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