To deliver comprehensive and efficient care, it is crucial to understand and address the unique healthcare needs of gender and sexual minority (GSM) groups. Implementing cultural humility training may enhance healthcare students' sensitivity, awareness, and proficiency in serving patients. However, there's a necessity to thoroughly evaluate the impact and effectiveness of these interventions, especially in relation to addressing the distinct healthcare requirements of GSM groups. This protocol describes the steps in conducting a systematic review (SR) to investigate if cultural humility training interventions for medical students enhance care of GSM groups. This SR aims to guide the creation of focused interventions and instructional plans to support fair healthcare delivery for GSM populations. The objective of this SR encompass a comprehensive examination across multiple databases such as PubMed (NCBI), Scopus (Elsevier), Cochrane (Wiley), Web of Science (Clarivate). Using keywords and MeSH phrases, the search method will find relevant research from each database's launch from January 1, 2000, until August 30, 2024, emphasizing English-language publications. To ensure comprehensiveness, reference lists of qualifying papers will be thoroughly reviewed. We shall extract the data and use the appropriate Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) checklist to evaluate the quality of the included study. By synthesizing the data, the findings will illuminate the value and efficacy of cultural humility training interventions for medical students in enhancing GSM group care. This synthesis will incorporate quantitative studies, to ensure a comprehensive understanding of the interventions' impacts. Ethics approval is not sought as the review will only synthesize data from published studies. The findings will be presented at conferences and published in peer-reviewed journals. CRD42024533825 •Our study examines cultural humility training, emphasizing self-reflection and power dynamics, specifically relevant for gender and sexual minority (GSM) groups.•We focus on healthcare students, exploring how early cultural humility training can impact future practice and GSM care.•This is the first systematic review and meta-analysis of cultural humility training for GSM groups, addressing a gap in existing literature.•Our findings aim to inform curriculum and educational policies, addressing a significant need in medical training.•Limiting the review to English-language studies may exclude important research conducted in other languages, potentially missing valuable perspectives and findings that could enhance the understanding of cultural humility training's global applicability.•The review may face challenges in measuring the long-term impact of cultural humility training interventions on healthcare students' competency and attitudes, as existing studies might have a limited follow-up period.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mex.2024.102963 | DOI Listing |
Biochem Mol Biol Educ
January 2025
Heritage University, Toppenish, Washington, USA.
The impact of Covid-19 pandemic has dramatically shifted the education landscape between recent college and university graduates and pathways to graduate degrees. In my perspective article, I wish to share the challenges, reflections, and a call-to-action framework in ways we can support and advocate for postbaccalaureate persons excluded because of their ethnicity of race, or from a structurally marginalized community or PEERS through the lens of mindfulness, humility, reflection, and deep listening. Through cross-institutional community network support, culturally responsive mentoring of postbaccalaureate PEERS is one of the key dimensions in empowering communities toward health, environmental, and social justice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
December 2024
Medical Education, Nova Southeastern University Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Allopathic Medicine, Fort Lauderdale, USA.
Introduction: It is imperative for the healthcare providers in the United States to be able to care for the growing number of patients with limited English proficiency (LEP) utilizing professional medical interpreters (MIs). Since little time in undergraduate medical education (UME) is devoted to this competency, an educational workshop on effective communication with MIs and Spanish-speaking LEP patients was developed.
Methods: A two-hour workshop was implemented for first-year medical students, featuring four educational strategies: (1) facilitator-led instructional simulation, (2) interactive didactic, (3) small-group clinical case discussion, and (4) large-group MI simulation.
Med Sci Educ
December 2024
Department of Medicine, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i, 1356 Lusitana St., Room 715, Honolulu, HI 96813 USA.
Objectives: To summarize the evidence related to the experiences and challenges of International Medical Graduates (IMGs) in healthcare systems of English-speaking countries.
Methods: Following the PRISMA statement, we searched MEDLINE and EMBASE for all peer-reviewed articles using keywords including "international medical graduates," "foreign medical graduates," or "transition," from their inception to December 21st, 2022.
Results: In this review, we included 20 articles, comprising 17 descriptive studies and three quasi-experimental studies.
Women Birth
January 2025
School of Midwifery, Otago Polytechnic, Private Bag 1910, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand.
Skilled midwifery care for LGBTQIA+ people is a human right, however LGBTQIA+ people have been under-served in perinatal care by the privileging of cisgender heterosexual endosex women as recipients of care. The education of midwives and other professionals to provide LGBTQIA+ inclusive care is a critical component of wider strategies to address LGBTQIA+ discrimination in perinatal care. This paper responds to this challenge by discussing an innovative and holistic approach to introducing and embedding LGBTQIA+ health equity into one midwifery education programme in Aotearoa New Zealand.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNurse Educ Today
December 2024
Department of Community and Mental Health Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, The Hashemite University, P.O. Box 330127, Zarqa 13133, Jordan. Electronic address:
Background: Understanding cultural humility is a challenge, even in academic nursing settings. Nursing academics are the driving force behind students and the next generation of nurses' awareness and practice of cultural humility.
Aim: The study investigated the predictors and differences of nursing academics' cultural humility in nursing education, as perceived by nursing students.
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