Beyond inclusion politics: A critical discourse analysis of sex and gender in medical education

IF 4.9 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Medical Education Pub Date : 2024-09-17 DOI:10.1111/medu.15532
Navin Kariyawasam, Nanky Rai, Malika Sharma
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Abstract

IntroductionMedical training refers frequently to sex and gender, yet these terms are often used vaguely and interchangeably with little critical engagement. We aimed to better understand the key discourses around sex and gender in medical training.MethodsAll verbal and written instances of gendered/sexed language, occurring in lectures, slides and provided written materials, within 1 year of preclerkship medical education at a single institution in Canada were recorded autoethnographically by a medical student. We analysed these instances using critical discourse analysis informed by anticolonial, feminist and queer theoretical perspectives, particularly contrasting the concepts of governmentality and ungovernability to better understand how sex and gender are deployed in medical training.ResultsDespite the proliferation of ostensibly queer‐ and trans‐positive content in medical curricula, sex and gender were frequently communicated inconsistently and imprecisely. In addition to, and perhaps as a result of, this inconsistent use, we uncovered three key discourses of (1) gender policing, (2) misogyny and (3) gender legibility. Collectively, these discourses can illustrate how medical education governs and reinforces gender norms.DiscussionThe repetitive and everyday use of ill‐defined and uncritical gendered and sexed language can be seen to discursively uphold systems of cisheteropatriarchy and transphobia within medicine. Trans and intersex bodies cannot be considered addendums to be tacked on to a foundation of cisnormative and inaccurate teaching in medical education. Institutional attempts to improve curricula must go beyond the addition of new modules, which can be undermined by otherwise cisheteropatriarchal understandings of sex and gender.
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超越包容政治:医学教育中的性与性别批判性话语分析
导言医学培训中经常提到性和性别,但这些术语经常被含糊不清地交替使用,很少有批判性的参与。我们的目的是更好地理解医学培训中围绕性和性别的关键话语。方法:一名医科学生在加拿大一所院校接受实习前医学教育的一年时间里,在讲座、幻灯片和提供的书面材料中出现的所有性别化/性别语言的口头和书面事例,我们都以自述的方式进行了记录。我们采用批判性话语分析方法对这些情况进行了分析,并借鉴了反殖民主义、女权主义和同性恋理论观点,特别是对比了政府性和不可治理性的概念,以更好地理解性和性别在医学培训中是如何被运用的。除了这种不一致的使用方式之外,或许也是由于这种不一致的使用方式,我们发现了三种关键的论述:(1)性别警务;(2)厌恶女性;(3)性别可读性。这些话语共同说明了医学教育是如何管理和强化性别规范的。讨论反复和日常使用定义不清、不加批判的性别和性别化语言,可以被视为在话语上维护了医学中的顺式父权制和跨性别恐惧症。在医学教育中,变性人和双性人的身体不能被视为附加物,被附加在顺性规范和不准确教学的基础上。机构改进课程的尝试必须超越增加新的模块,否则顺性别父权制对性和性别的理解可能会破坏这些模块。
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来源期刊
Medical Education
Medical Education 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
279
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical Education seeks to be the pre-eminent journal in the field of education for health care professionals, and publishes material of the highest quality, reflecting world wide or provocative issues and perspectives. The journal welcomes high quality papers on all aspects of health professional education including; -undergraduate education -postgraduate training -continuing professional development -interprofessional education
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