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1.
Can Med Educ J ; 13(2): 5-12, 2022 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35572013

RESUMO

Background: As a paradigm of education that emphasizes equity and social justice, transformative education aims to improve societal structures by inspiring learners to become agents of social change. In an attempt to contribute to transformative education, the University of Toronto MD program implemented a workshop on poverty and health that included tutors with lived experience of poverty. This research aimed to examine how tutors, as members of a group that faces structural oppression, understood their participation in the workshop. Methods: This research drew on qualitative case study methodology and interview data, using the concept of transformative education to direct data analysis and interpretation. Results: Our findings centred around two broad themes: misalignments between transformative learning and the structures of medical education; and unintended consequences of transformative education within the dominant paradigms of medical education. These misalignments and unintended consequences provided insight into how courses operating within the structures, hierarchies and paradigms of medical education may be limited in their potential to contribute to transformative education. Conclusions: To be truly transformative, medical education must be willing to try to modify structures that reinforce oppression rather than integrating marginalized persons into educational processes that maintain social inequity.


Contexte: En tant que paradigme favorisant l'équité et la justice sociale, l'éducation axée sur la transformation vise à améliorer les structures sociétales en inspirant les apprenants à devenir des agents du changement social. Dans une visée d'éducation transformatrice, le programme de doctorat en médecine de l'Université de Toronto a mis en place un atelier sur le thème de la santé et la pauvreté auquel participaient des tuteurs ayant une expérience vécue de la pauvreté. Notre recherche visait à examiner comment les tuteurs, en tant que membres d'un groupe confronté à l'oppression structurelle, ont compris leur participation à l'atelier. Méthodes: Cette recherche qualitative s'est appuyée sur une méthodologie d'étude de cas et sur des données d'entrevue, en utilisant le concept d'éducation transformatrice comme prisme pour l'analyse et l'interprétation des données. Résultats: Nos résultats s'articulent autour de deux grands thèmes : les décalages entre l'apprentissage transformateur et les structures de l'éducation médicale, et les conséquences inattendues de l'éducation transformatrice au sein des paradigmes dominants de l'éducation médicale. Ces divergences et ces conséquences non voulues ont permis de constater que les cours qui sont ancrés dans les structures, les hiérarchies et les paradigmes contribueront peu à l'éducation transformatrice. Conclusions: Pour que l'éducation médicale soit véritablement transformatrice, il faut qu'il y ait une volonté de modifier les structures qui renforcent l'oppression plutôt que de faire entrer les personnes marginalisées dans des processus éducatifs qui perpétuent l'inégalité sociale.

2.
East Mediterr Health J ; 24(9): 914-921, 2018 Dec 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30570124

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The Lebanese American University has a well-functioning inter-professional education (IPE) programme; this is a fundamental pedagogical approach in healthcare education in which students from different professions learn together, ultimately leading to improving the skills of the health care workforce and thus improving patient outcomes. The programme includes nursing, nutrition, medicine, pharmacy and social work students, and has now been running for 6 years. AIMS: This paper aims at describing the implementation of an IPE programme in Lebanon by focusing on how to overcome the main challenges. METHODS: We describe our experience using the categories of challenges developed by Sunguya et al. (2014), where they analysed published reports of IPE programmes in developed countries. We identified three additional challenges that might be relevant throughout the Middle East/North Africa (MENA) region or in countries with similar socioeconomic characteristics. RESULTS: The challenges encountered in designing and implementing the IPE programme were similar to other programmes: curriculum, leadership, resources, stereotypes and attitudes, variety of students, IPE concept, teaching, enthusiasm, professional jargon and accreditation as well as assessment of learning, security and logistics. CONCLUSIONS: This paper provides data and successful strategies that can be used by planned or implemented programmes in similar socioeconomic contexts in the MENA region.


Assuntos
Pessoal de Saúde/educação , Relações Interprofissionais , Currículo , Humanos , Líbano , Avaliação de Programas e Projetos de Saúde
3.
Anthropol Med ; 23(1): 14-29, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26982432

RESUMO

The critiques leveled towards medical humanitarianism by the social sciences have yet to be felt in medical education. The elevation of biological suffering, at the detriment of sociopolitical contextualization, has been shown to clearly impact both acute and long-term care of individuals and communities. With many medical students spending a portion of their educational time in global learning experiences, exposure to humanitarianism and its consequences becomes a unique component of biomedical education. How does the medical field reconcile global health education with the critiques of humanitarianism? This paper argues that the medical response to humanitarian reason should begin at the level of a social history. Using experiential data culled from fieldwork with Palestinian and Syrian refugees in Lebanon, the authors argue that an expanded social history, combined with knowledge derived from the social sciences, can have significant clinical implications. The ability to contextualize an individual's disease and life within a complex sociopolitical framework means that students must draw on disciplines as varied as anthropology, sociology, and political history to further their knowledge base. Moreover, situating these educational goals within the framework of physician advocacy can build a strong base in medical education from both a biomedical and activist perspective.


Assuntos
Altruísmo , Saúde Global , Refugiados , Antropologia Médica , Árabes , Feminino , Saúde Global/ética , Saúde Global/etnologia , Acessibilidade aos Serviços de Saúde , Humanos , Líbano , Masculino , Gravidez , Síria , Desemprego
4.
Acad Med ; 90(5): 565-8, 2015 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25406609

RESUMO

Research and clinical experience reliably and repeatedly demonstrate that the determinants of health are most accurately conceptualized as biosocial phenomena, in which health and disease emerge through the interaction between biology and the social environment. Increased appreciation of biosocial approaches have already driven change in premedical education and focused attention on population health in current U.S. health care reform. Medical education, however, places primary emphasis on biomedicine and often fails to emphasize and educate students and trainees about the social forces that shape disease and illness patterns. The authors of this Commentary argue that medical education requires a comprehensive transformation to incorporate rigorous biosocial training to ensure that all future health professionals are equipped with the knowledge and skills necessary to practice social medicine. Three distinct models for accomplishing such transformation are presented: SocMed's monthlong, elective courses in Northern Uganda and Haiti; Harvard Medical School's semester-long, required social medicine course; and the Lebanese American University's curricular integration of social medicine throughout its entire four-year curriculum. Successful implementation of social medicine training requires the institutionalization of biosocial curricula; the utilization of innovative, engaging pedagogies; and the involvement of health professions students from broad demographic backgrounds and with all career interests. The achievement of such transformational and necessary change to medical education will prepare future health practitioners working in all settings to respond more proactively and comprehensively to the health needs of all populations.


Assuntos
Educação Médica/organização & administração , Necessidades e Demandas de Serviços de Saúde/estatística & dados numéricos , Faculdades de Medicina , Medicina Social/organização & administração , Estudantes de Medicina/estatística & dados numéricos , Humanos
5.
AIDS Patient Care STDS ; 26(3): 141-7, 2012 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22304374

RESUMO

Lay health workers (LHWs) are individuals who participate in a variety of health services, even though they have no formal professional training. They have been used in a variety of settings, especially where health care needs outstrip available human resources. Lesotho faces a severe human resource shortage as it attempts to manage its HIV pandemic, with more than 25% of the population infected with HIV. This article reports on a program that provided HIV services in seven rural clinics in Lesotho. LHWs played an important role in the provision of HIV services that ranged from translation, adherence counseling, voluntary counseling and testing (VCT) for HIV and patient triage, to medication distribution and laboratory specimen processing. Training the LHWs was part of the clinic physicians' responsibilities and thus required no additional funding beyond regular clinic operations. This lent sustainability to the training of the LHWs. This paper describes the recruitment, training, activities, and perceptions of the LHW work between June 2006 and December 2008. LHWs participated successfully in the care of thousands of people with HIV in Lesotho and their experience can serve as a model for other countries facing the disease.


Assuntos
Agentes Comunitários de Saúde , Atenção à Saúde , Infecções por HIV/terapia , Acessibilidade aos Serviços de Saúde/organização & administração , Serviços de Saúde Rural , Agentes Comunitários de Saúde/educação , Atenção à Saúde/organização & administração , Humanos , Lesoto , Desenvolvimento de Programas , Serviços de Saúde Rural/organização & administração , Recursos Humanos
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