In the wake of the Black Lives Matter and other antiracism justice movements, medical education is evolving to incorporate health equity principles for all medical students and residents, while also increasing institutional diversity recruitment of minoritized physicians. As the demographics of U.S. medical trainees shift to reflect a rapidly evolving patient population, the prevalence of culturally concordant patient-physician visits, where patients share elements of language, religion, customs, and identities with their physician, is also expected to increase. However, existing antiracist curricula are standardized to all learners and there is a dearth of cultural sensitivity training designed specifically for minoritized learners to interrogate the culturally concordant space they share with patients and mentors. In this article, the authors propose a new model for minoritized learners' cultural training, culturally reflective medicine (CRM) that identifies unanticipated tensions that may arise as minoritized learners bridge both White and Eurocentric professional and personal identities, examines how intersectionality can both strengthen encounters and lead to shared blind spots, and empowers minoritized physicians with tools for self- and group reflection to advocate for their communities. CRM is contextualized within the current landscape of cultural sensitivity training in medical education. The authors provide 2 clinical vignettes to demonstrate how CRM can unveil more nuanced understandings of health disparities than existing cultural training. As institutions work toward diversity, equity, justice, and antioppression, CRM provides a novel framework for redesigning medical education that better acknowledges and incorporates the unique knowledge of minoritized learners.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000004744 | DOI Listing |
Agency - the capacity to produce an effect - is a foundational aspect of medical education. Agency is usually conceptualized at the level of the , with each learner charged with taking responsibility to pull themselves up by their bootstraps. This conceptualization is problematic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Pharm Teach Learn
January 2025
Pharmacy Practice and Translational Research, Health 2, University of Houston College of Pharmacy, 4349 Martin Luther King Boulevard, Houston, TX 77204-5039, United States of America. Electronic address:
The ideology of professional identity formation (PIF) is trending in pharmacy education. Therefore, we must initiate conversations about how the PIF framework impacts minoritized students. PIF is applied at default through the white racial frame, which is why making PIF inclusive is difficult.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegr Med Rep
July 2024
Department of Biology, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Context: Students of color in the United States experience elevated stress across the entire spectrum of education, spanning from early stages of K-12 to the more advanced stages of postgraduate studies. This sustained state of chronic stress decreases learning and curtails opportunities, especially in science, technology, engineering, and math (ST EM) fields, where stress levels are considered exceptionally high. Mindfulness-based practices such as MBSR have a proven effective for stress reduction in college students.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA Netw Open
July 2024
Universidad Central Del Caribe School of Medicine, Bayamón, Puerto Rico.
Importance: Faculty diversity in academic medicine may better prepare the next generation of equity-minded health care practitioners and leaders. Prefaculty development is an emerging concept to support trainees in achieving key knowledge, skills, and experiences to become successful faculty.
Objective: To outline competencies, with corresponding milestones, to support the academic career development of learners, inclusive of racial, ethnic, sexual, and gender identities minoritized in medicine.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!