Gender Minorities in Simulation: A Mixed Methods Study of Medical School Standardized Patient Programs in the United States and Canada.

Simul Healthc

From the Standardized Patient Program (C.A.B.), Medical Education Research Unit (E.J.N., L.A.W.), Department of Undergraduate Medical Education, University of Louisville School of Medicine; Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences (R.M.C.), University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences; and LGBT Center Health Sciences Campus (A.E.W.), University of Louisville, Louisville, KY.

Published: December 2021

Purpose: A provider's ability to translate knowledge about transgender health to affirming patient care is key to addressing disparities. However, standardized patient (SP) programs have little published guidance for gender-affirming care or addressing disparities experienced by transgender and nonbinary patients.

Method: Between 2018 and 2019, we invited all 208 accredited US and Canadian medical schools to participate in a study to determine how gender minorities are represented in SP encounters. Responding programs (n = 59, response rate = 28%) that represented patients with diverse gender identities were invited to complete semistructured interviews about SP case content, impact, and barriers to this work. Discussions were analyzed using a modified grounded theory method.

Results: Fifty nine of 208 eligible programs (response rate = 28.3%) completed our survey and 24 completed interviews. More than half of programs used gender minority SPs (n = 35, 59.3%). More than half of the programs also reported portraying gender minority cases (n = 31, 52.5%). Interviewees described how effective SP simulation required purposeful case development, engaging subject matter experts with lived experience, and ensuring psychological safety of gender minority SPs. Barriers included recruitment, fear of disrespecting gender minority communities, and transphobia. Engaging gender minorities throughout case development, training, and implementation of SP encounters was perceived to reduce bias and stereotyping, but respondents unanimously desired guidance on best practices on SP methodology regarding gender identity.

Conclusions: Many programs have established or are developing SP activities that portray gender minority patients. Effective SP simulation hinges on authenticity, but the decisions around case development and casting vary. Specifically, programs lack consensus about who should portray gender minority patients. This research suggests that input from gender minority communities both to inform best practices at the macro level and in an ongoing advisory capacity at the program level will be essential to teach gender-affirming care.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SIH.0000000000000532DOI Listing

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