AI Article Synopsis

  • Existing mentorship programs often overlook the unique needs of marginalized groups, particularly LGBTQIA+ mentees, prompting the development of a specialized curriculum at Harvard.
  • The Harvard Sexual and Gender Minority Health Mentoring Program targeted early-, mid-, and late-career faculty to support underrepresented health professionals, focusing on LGBTQIA+ health over six sessions in spring 2022.
  • Evaluations showed high participant satisfaction, skill improvements, and behavioral changes, indicating the program's effectiveness in fostering inclusive mentorship and suggesting its potential application in broader training contexts.

Article Abstract

While mentors can learn general strategies for effective mentoring, existing mentorship curricula do not comprehensively address how to support marginalized mentees, including LGBTQIA+ mentees. After identifying best mentoring practices and existing evidence-based curricula, we adapted these to create the Harvard Sexual and Gender Minority Health Mentoring Program. The primary goal was to address the needs of underrepresented health professionals in two overlapping groups: (1) LGBTQIA+ mentees and (2) any mentees focused on LGBTQIA+ health. An inaugural cohort ( = 12) of early-, mid-, and late-career faculty piloted this curriculum in spring 2022 during six 90-minute sessions. We evaluated the program using confidential surveys after each session and at the program's conclusion as well as with focus groups. Faculty were highly satisfied with the program and reported skill gains and behavioral changes. Our findings suggest this novel curriculum can effectively prepare mentors to support mentees with identities different from their own; the whole curriculum, or parts, could be integrated into other trainings to enhance inclusive mentoring. Our adaptations are also a model for how mentorship curricula can be tailored to a particular focus (i.e., LGBTQIA+ health). Ideally, such mentor trainings can help create more inclusive environments throughout academic medicine.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10928698PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2024.18DOI Listing

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