LGBTQ+ individuals are not explicitly represented in emergency medicine simulation curricula.

MedEdPublish (2016) Pub Date : 2024-04-30 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.12688/mep.20242.1
Jessica Bod, Samuel Buck, Iris Chandler, Katja Goldflam, Alina Tsyrulnik, Ryan Coughlin, Jessica Fujimoto, Melissa Joseph, David Della-Giustina, Manali Phadke, Dowin Boatright
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Abstract

Background: Medical educational societies have emphasized the inclusion of marginalized populations, including the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ+) population, in educational curricula. Lack of inclusion can contribute to health inequality and mistreatment due to unconscious bias. Little didactic time is spent on the care of LGBTQ+ individuals in emergency medicine (EM) curricula. Simulation based medical education can be a helpful pedagogy in teaching cross-cultural care and communication skills. In this study, we sought to determine the representation of the LGBTQ+ population in EM simulation curricula. We also sought to determine if representations of the LGBTQ+ population depicted stigmatized behavior.

Methods: We reviewed 971 scenarios from six simulation case banks for LGBTQ+ representation. Frequency distributions were determined for major demographic variables. Chi-Squared or Fisher's Exact Test, depending on the cell counts, were used to determine if relationships existed between LGBTQ+ representation and bank type, author type, and stigmatized behavior.

Results: Of the 971 scenarios reviewed, eight (0.82%) scenarios explicitly represented LGBTQ+ patients, 319 (32.85%) represented heterosexual patients, and the remaining 644 (66.32%) did not specify these patient characteristics. All cases representing LGBTQ+ patients were found in institutional case banks. Three of the eight cases depicted stigmatized behavior.

Conclusions: LGBTQ+ individuals are not typically explicitly represented in EM simulation curricula. LGBTQ+ individuals should be more explicitly represented to reduce stigma, allow EM trainees to practice using gender affirming language, address health conditions affecting the LGBTQ+ population, and address possible bias when treating LGBTQ+ patients.

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急诊医学模拟课程中并没有明确体现 LGBTQ+ 个人。
背景:医学教育协会一直强调将边缘化人群,包括女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性者和同性恋者(LGBTQ+)纳入教育课程。由于无意识的偏见,缺乏包容性可能会导致健康不平等和虐待。在急诊医学(EM)课程中,用于LGBTQ+人群护理的授课时间很少。模拟医学教育是一种有助于教授跨文化护理和沟通技巧的教学方法。在这项研究中,我们试图确定 LGBTQ+ 群体在急诊医学模拟课程中的代表性。我们还试图确定LGBTQ+人群的表现是否描述了污名化行为:我们审查了六个模拟案例库中的 971 个场景,以了解 LGBTQ+ 的代表性。我们确定了主要人口统计学变量的频率分布。根据单元计数,使用齐次方检验(Chi-Squared)或费雪精确检验(Fisher's Exact Test)来确定 LGBTQ+ 代表性与银行类型、作者类型和污名化行为之间是否存在关系:在审查的 971 个案例中,有 8 个案例(0.82%)明确代表了 LGBTQ+ 患者,319 个案例(32.85%)代表了异性恋患者,其余 644 个案例(66.32%)没有说明这些患者的特征。所有代表 LGBTQ+ 患者的案例都是在机构案例库中找到的。8 个病例中有 3 个描述了污名化行为:结论:LGBTQ+人群在急诊模拟课程中通常没有明确体现。LGBTQ+人群应得到更明确的体现,以减少污名化,让急诊科受训人员练习使用性别肯定语言,解决影响LGBTQ+人群的健康问题,并解决治疗LGBTQ+患者时可能存在的偏见。
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