Skin Color Representation in Teaching Photographs: One Institution's Approach to Addressing Visual Racism in Medical Education.

IF 2.1 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Teaching and Learning in Medicine Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-07-01 DOI:10.1080/10401334.2023.2226648
Ha D H Le, Shreya Sreekantaswamy, Holly Lind, Michael B Birdsall, Jenna Jensen, Stormy C Foster-Palmer, Ben J Brintz, Candace Chow, Boyd Richards, Sarah D Cipriano
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Abstract

Problem: Visual racism refers to both the underrepresentation and inappropriate representation of darker skin types in medical education. By not teaching medical students and resident physicians to recognize common conditions in darker skin, it perpetuates biases that contribute to healthcare disparities for racial and ethnic minoritized groups. In this paper we describe our efforts to engage in institutional anti-racism work by addressing imbalances in representation of darker skin types in visual teaching images within our institution's curriculum. Intervention: We initially surveyed preclinical medical students regarding their perceptions of skin color representation in two courses. Researchers recorded the skin types of all teaching photographs in these courses in 2020. We then provided feedback and education to faculty, proposing that they increase brown and black skin color representation in educational content. During 2021, we reviewed the same courses and surveyed students again to ascertain the implementation and impact of our proposal. Context: We applied our intervention to two courses, Host & Defense (H&D) and Skin, Muscle, Bone, and Joint (SMBJ) since both courses utilize a large number of teaching images. Impact: From 2020 to 2021, both H&D and SMBJ significantly increased the proportion of visual teaching images that included darker skin types, with an increase from 28% to 42% in H&D and 20% to 30% in SMBJ. Significantly more students in the courses' 2021 iterations (73% in H&D, 93% in SMBJ) felt that lectures had appropriate representations of darker skin types when compared to students who took the course in 2020 (8% in H&D, 51% in SMBJ). Students in 2021 felt more confident in recognizing dermatological signs and symptoms in patients with darker skin than students in 2020. The majority of students in both 2020 and 2021 reported wanting to see a gradient of skin types for every dermatological condition discussed. Lessons learned: Our work suggests that addressing visual racism can be achieved partly by setting expectations for increased visual representation, collaborating across educational departments, and establishing clear metrics for assessing implementation. Future interventions will require a continual feedback loop of monitoring learning material, assessing faculty and student perception, refining resources, and recommending revisions to improve visual representation across the entire curriculum.

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教学照片中的肤色表现:一家机构解决医学教育中视觉种族主义问题的方法。
问题:视觉种族主义是指在医学教育中对深色皮肤类型的代表不足或代表不当。由于没有教导医科学生和住院医师认识深色皮肤的常见疾病,导致偏见长期存在,造成少数种族和族裔群体在医疗保健方面的差异。在本文中,我们介绍了本机构在课程中通过解决视觉教学图像中深色皮肤类型代表的不平衡问题来参与机构反种族主义工作的努力。干预措施:我们首先调查了临床前医学生对两门课程中肤色表现的看法。研究人员记录了 2020 年这些课程中所有教学照片的肤色类型。然后,我们向教师提供反馈和教育,建议他们在教学内容中增加棕色和黑色肤色的表现。2021 年,我们对相同的课程进行了审查,并再次对学生进行了调查,以确定我们建议的实施情况和影响。背景:我们将干预措施应用于两门课程,即 "宿主与防御"(H&D)和 "皮肤、肌肉、骨骼和关节"(SMBJ),因为这两门课程都使用了大量教学图片。影响:从 2020 年到 2021 年,"宿主与防御 "和 "皮肤、肌肉、骨骼和关节 "两门课程中包含深色皮肤类型的直观教学图片的比例都有显著增加,"宿主与防御 "从 28% 增加到 42%,"皮肤、肌肉、骨骼和关节 "从 20% 增加到 30%。与 2020 年选修这门课程的学生相比,2021 年选修这门课程的学生(H&D 为 73%,SMBJ 为 93%)认为讲课中适当表现深色皮肤类型的比例明显更高(H&D 为 8%,SMBJ 为 51%)。与 2020 年的学生相比,2021 年的学生对识别深色皮肤患者的皮肤病体征和症状更有信心。2020 年和 2021 年的大多数学生都表示希望在讨论的每种皮肤病中都能看到皮肤类型的梯度。经验教训:我们的工作表明,解决视觉种族主义问题的部分方法是设定增加视觉表现的期望值、跨教育部门合作以及建立评估实施情况的明确指标。未来的干预措施将需要一个持续的反馈循环,即监测学习材料、评估教师和学生的看法、完善资源并提出修订建议,以改善整个课程的视觉表现。
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来源期刊
Teaching and Learning in Medicine
Teaching and Learning in Medicine 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
12.00%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Teaching and Learning in Medicine ( TLM) is an international, forum for scholarship on teaching and learning in the health professions. Its international scope reflects the common challenge faced by all medical educators: fostering the development of capable, well-rounded, and continuous learners prepared to practice in a complex, high-stakes, and ever-changing clinical environment. TLM''s contributors and readership comprise behavioral scientists and health care practitioners, signaling the value of integrating diverse perspectives into a comprehensive understanding of learning and performance. The journal seeks to provide the theoretical foundations and practical analysis needed for effective educational decision making in such areas as admissions, instructional design and delivery, performance assessment, remediation, technology-assisted instruction, diversity management, and faculty development, among others. TLM''s scope includes all levels of medical education, from premedical to postgraduate and continuing medical education, with articles published in the following categories:
期刊最新文献
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