Medical students’ perceptions of global health at the University of Cape Town, South Africa: The gap between interest and education

IF 0.4 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES African Journal of Health Professions Education Pub Date : 2021-12-31 DOI:10.7196/ajhpe.2021.v13i4.1338
M. Potter, P. Naidoo, L. Pohl, K. Chu
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Abstract

Background. Global health competencies are an increasingly important part of medical training; however, there is currently no integrated formal global health curriculum at South African (SA) medical schools, and perceptions of medical students towards global health have not been reported. Objectives. To describe SA medical students’: (i) perceptions of global health; (ii) access to global health education (GHE); (iii) awareness of global surgery as a global health priority; and (iv) perceived relevance of select medical specialties to global health. Methods. Medical students at the University of Cape Town (UCT), SA, were invited to complete a 35-item survey over 2 months in 2018. The survey was designed on REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) and distributed by email. All responses were anonymised and self-reported. Results. Of 1 640 medical students, 245 (18%) completed the survey. Only 66 (27%) reported GHE in medical school, whereas 213 (87%) reported a career interest in global health. Childhood in a rural setting was a positive predictor of a career interest in global health, while lack of medical resources and infrastructure in resource-limited communities was the most commonly cited barrier to a career in global health. Most students identified family medicine and infectious diseases as the two most important specialties in global health delivery. The majority of students had limited insight into global surgery, which ranked low as a past and future global health priority. Conclusion. UCT medical students are interested in global health careers, but lack formalised GHE or global surgery education during their medical studies to support and encourage integrating global health into their future careers.
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南非开普敦大学医学生对全球健康的看法:兴趣和教育之间的差距
背景全球卫生能力是医疗培训日益重要的组成部分;然而,南非医学院目前没有综合的正式全球健康课程,医学生对全球健康的看法也没有报道。目标。描述SA医学生的:(i)对全球健康的看法;二获得全球健康教育的机会;(iii)认识到全球外科手术是全球卫生优先事项;以及(iv)所选择的医学专业与全球健康的相关性。方法。2018年,南非开普敦大学(UCT)的医学生受邀在两个月内完成了一项35项调查。该调查是在REDCap(研究电子数据捕获)上设计的,并通过电子邮件分发。所有回复均为匿名和自我报告。后果在1640名医科学生中,245人(18%)完成了这项调查。只有66人(27%)在医学院报告了GHE,而213人(87%)报告了对全球健康的职业兴趣。农村环境中的童年是对全球卫生事业感兴趣的积极预测因素,而资源有限的社区缺乏医疗资源和基础设施是阻碍全球卫生事业发展的最常见障碍。大多数学生认为家庭医学和传染病是全球卫生服务中最重要的两个专业。大多数学生对全球外科的了解有限,全球外科在过去和未来的全球卫生优先事项中排名较低。结论UCT医学生对全球健康职业感兴趣,但在医学学习期间缺乏正式的GHE或全球外科教育,以支持和鼓励将全球健康融入他们未来的职业生涯。
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来源期刊
African Journal of Health Professions Education
African Journal of Health Professions Education HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
审稿时长
24 weeks
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