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1.
Health (London) ; 27(4): 476-490, 2023 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34523381

RESUMO

The scholarship on patient hope in biomedical technologies describes two narratives of hope: the biomedical and the individual. The biomedical narrative represents patients' beliefs that the institution of science will eventually produce treatment for their disease, whereas the individual narrative represents patients' beliefs that they can alter their prognosis through affective and behavioral modifications. The distinct analytical categories of "biomedical" and "individual," however, fail to account for the fact that patient hope has been found to be much more complex. Building upon extant literature, we contribute to the understanding of the complexity of patient hope in biomedical technologies by examining a case that highlights interdependencies between the biomedical and individual narratives: hope in stem cell technologies (SCTs). We draw upon interviews with patients with Parkinson's Disease, and find two narratives of hope: a biomedical narrative, as captured above, and an additional hybrid narrative, which we call a nature narrative. The nature narrative reflects patients' beliefs that scientists will eventually create SCTs that will allow their individual body to naturally heal itself, which combines a biomedical and an individual narrative.


Assuntos
Doença de Parkinson , Médicos , Humanos , Confiança , Narração , Doença de Parkinson/terapia , Tecnologia Biomédica
2.
Acad Med ; 97(11): 1665-1672, 2022 11 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35797577

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Following shifts that broadened the medical profession's conceptualization of the underlying drivers of health, medical schools are required to integrate curricula on health disparities and the social context of medicine into undergraduate medical education. Although previous research has focused on student experiences and outcomes in these curricula, less attention has been paid to the experiences of the physician-faculty involved. This study aimed to capture faculty insights to improve understanding of the challenges and opportunities of implementing this curricular reform. METHOD: In-depth, semistructured interviews were conducted with 10 faculty members at one U.S. medical school in spring 2019 to capture their experiences designing and teaching a new curriculum related to the social determinants of health and health disparities. Study design, including interview guide development, was informed by the critical pedagogy perspective and social constructionist approaches to curriculum implementation. With the use of a constructivist grounded theory approach, interview transcripts were analyzed using open, thematic, and axial coding techniques. Primary themes were categorized as professional, organizational, interactional, or intrapersonal and organized into the final model. RESULTS: Participants processed their experiences at 4 concentric levels: professional, organizational, interactional, and intrapersonal. Faculty generally embraced the movement to incorporate more discussion of social context as a driver of health outcomes. However, they struggled with the shortcomings of their training and navigating structural constraints within their school when developing and delivering content. When confronted with these limitations, faculty experienced unexpected tension in the classroom setting that catalyzed self-reflection and reconstruction of their teaching approach. CONCLUSIONS: Findings highlight the challenges that faculty encounter when integrating social determinants of health and related curricula into undergraduate medical education. They also speak to the need for a broader conceptualization of relevant expertise and have implications for how medical schools select, train, and support medical educators in this work.


Assuntos
Educação de Graduação em Medicina , Humanos , Determinantes Sociais da Saúde , Currículo , Docentes , Faculdades de Medicina , Docentes de Medicina/educação
3.
Health (London) ; 26(4): 475-494, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33076717

RESUMO

Citing their students' low levels of empathy, medical educators have scrambled to implement curricula with the hopes of buffering against the corrosive effects of biomedical and clinical experiences in medical school. The assumption undergirding these studies by social scientists and medical educators alike is that immersion in biomedical education and clinical experience erodes students' empathic capacities, and that exposure to humanities and social sciences content will amend these losses. But we do not know if this assumption is correct. In this project, we empirically assess this assumption by utilizing a unique data set constructed from student applicant and survey data from the American Medical College Application Service (AMCAS) and the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). We test whether medical school students (N = 8255) from the United States (U.S.) with different academic backgrounds represented by their college major have different levels of empathy, net of demographic control variables. We report two findings. First, we find that students who majored in humanities or interpretive social sciences disciplines have higher empathy scores than their peers who majored in the positivistic social sciences and STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) disciplines. Second, we find that the relationship between empathy and time in medical school is more nuanced than we would expect from the existing literature.


Assuntos
Estudantes de Medicina , Currículo , Empatia , Ciências Humanas/educação , Humanos , Ciências Sociais , Estados Unidos
4.
J Health Soc Behav ; 62(3): 255-270, 2021 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34528486

RESUMO

From 1940 to 1980, studies of medical education were foundational to sociology, but attention shifted away from medical training in the late 1980s. Recently, there has been a marked return to this once pivotal topic, reflecting new questions and stakes. This article traces this resurgence by reviewing recent substantive research trends and setting the agenda for future research. We summarize four current research foci that reflect and critically map onto earlier projects in this subfield while driving theoretical development elsewhere in the larger discipline: (1) professional socialization, (2) knowledge regimes, (3) stratification within the profession, and (4) sociology of the field of medical education. We then offer six potential future directions where more research is needed: (1) inequalities in medical education, (2) socialization across the life course and new institutional forms of gatekeeping, (3) provider well-being, (4) globalization, (5) medical education as knowledge-based work, and (6) effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.


Assuntos
Educação Médica , Sociologia , Educação Médica/métodos , Educação Médica/organização & administração , Previsões , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Modelos Educacionais , Profissionalismo , Racismo , Sexismo , Fatores Socioeconômicos , Sociologia/história , Sociologia/métodos , Sociologia/tendências
5.
J Empir Res Hum Res Ethics ; 15(5): 443-451, 2020 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32363984

RESUMO

Empirical studies have found that altruism and self-interest are the two primary motivations for enrollment in clinical trials. Some studies have shown that in some cases these two motivations are contingent upon each other, which complicates our understanding of motivation. In this study, we interviewed 27 people with Parkinson's disease about their willingness to enroll in a hypothetical clinical trial. Through inductive, grounded theory analysis of the interview transcripts, we find four different contingent relationships between altruism and self-interest. It is important for ethicists to be aware of these more complex motivations because some are ethically problematic and others not. Moreover, practitioners need to be aware of these contingent relationships so that they can understand the motivations of the research participants.


Assuntos
Altruísmo , Motivação , Humanos , Voluntários
6.
J Health Soc Behav ; 60(1): 55-68, 2019 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30650990

RESUMO

In their attempt to address racial disparities in the provision of healthcare, the U.S. medical profession has reproduced racial inequalities of their own. In this article, I draw upon interview data with medical educators and students to detail how medical educators routinely offload the instruction on the social underpinnings and consequences of race onto students, particularly students of color. I develop the concept of the conscripted curriculum to capture how students' social identities are utilized by educators in the professionalization process. While there are exceptions in curricular approaches, most educators create the conscripted curriculum by eliciting students to share their social experiences with race in the small group setting while only providing students with didactic material on biological understandings of race. As a result, students of color report experiencing more emotionally exhausting and unrewarded labor than their white peers, and educators further devalue the social implications of race for healthcare.


Assuntos
Currículo , Educação Médica , Disparidades em Assistência à Saúde , Racismo , Humanos , Fatores Socioeconômicos , Estados Unidos
7.
J Pharmacol Toxicol Methods ; 94(Pt 1): 34-43, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29684554

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: The adenine model of kidney disease typically involves dietary delivery of adenine over several weeks. This model can be variable in its disease progression and can result in significant mortality. In the current study, the amount of adenine delivered to rats was controlled by utilizing oral gavage administration over a short period in an attempt to induce robust renal pathology while addressing variability and viability of the animals. METHODS: Adenine (150 or 200 mg/kg) was administered via oral gavage for 10 consecutive days, and assessed over a total of 20 days. RESULTS: Both adenine dose groups manifested pathophysiological features of kidney disease such as proteinuria, elevated serum creatinine and BUN, and tubulointerstitial fibrosis. The animals also displayed a decline in glomerular filtration rate. Renal mRNA expression of genes associated with injury, inflammation, and fibrosis (i.e., Col1a1, Acta2, Serpine1, Timp1, Fn-Eda, Tgfb1, Ccl2, Nlrp3, Aqp1 and Ccnd1) were elevated as were urinary biomarkers that have translational utility (i.e., clusterin, KIM-1, MCP-1, OPN, NGAL, B2M, calbindin, and cystatin C). All disease endpoints were more pronounced in the 200 mg/kg group, however, while measures of tissue fibrosis were sustained, there was partial recovery by day 20 in functional readouts. No mortality was observed in either dose group. DISCUSSION: Short-term delivery of adenine via precise gavage delivery induced a robust model with hallmarks of fibrotic kidney disease, had limited variance between animals, and no animal morbidity within the 20 days studied. This model represents a methodical alternative to long-term dietary dosing of adenine.


Assuntos
Adenina/administração & dosagem , Fibrose/induzido quimicamente , Nefropatias/induzido quimicamente , Rim/efeitos dos fármacos , Administração Oral , Animais , Biomarcadores/urina , Fibrose/metabolismo , Fibrose/urina , Taxa de Filtração Glomerular/efeitos dos fármacos , Inflamação/induzido quimicamente , Inflamação/metabolismo , Inflamação/urina , Rim/metabolismo , Nefropatias/metabolismo , Nefropatias/urina , Masculino , RNA Mensageiro/metabolismo , Ratos , Ratos Sprague-Dawley
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