威斯康星大学医学专业人数不足的师生对少数族裔税的看法。

Eden F Charles, Sharon-Rose Nartey, Elizabeth A Felton, Elizabeth M Petty
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:医学学术界的少数群体税可以定义为以多样性的名义为医学界代表不足的教职员工和学生增加的责任。这通常表现为参与额外的多元化委员会、招聘工作和导师活动。这些额外的责任往往不被认可,不包括在晋升中,并占用了其他临床、研究和传统学术责任的时间:在研究具有 URiM 身份的教职员工和学生在少数族裔税收方面的经验的文献中,存在着很大的空白。我们的目标是开展一个质量改进项目,通过采访URiM身份认证的教师和与URiM身份认证的学生开展焦点小组讨论来探索这一空白,目的是提出建议,帮助减少少数民族税给这一群体带来的负担:方法:在对威斯康星大学医学与公共卫生学院(URiM)的学生进行焦点小组讨论和对威斯康星大学医学与公共卫生学院的教职员工进行访谈时,使用了有关学术医学中少数族裔税收负担的范围性文献综述,并据此提出了相关问题。在制定了促进指南后,我们与 14 名被认定为 URiM 的学生进行了 3 次 1 小时的焦点小组讨论,并与被认定为 URiM 的教师进行了 8 次 30 分钟的访谈。在审阅笔录后,我们使用归纳分析法生成了编码手册。编码工作由两名不同的编码员独立完成,以确保编码员之间的可靠性:结果:91%的学生和 62.5%的教职员工表示在西悉尼医学院经历过少数民族税。教职员工还表示,由于西悉尼医学院的项目支持URiM的教职员工,他们越来越感受到支持。学生们表示,少数民族税是他们作为URiM学生的核心角色。学生和教师都表示,少数民族税的额外负担占用了传统学术活动的时间,而传统学术活动对于晋升(教师)或居留(学生)是必不可少的:URiM教职员工和学生所承受的少数民族税负可能会对他们的职业生涯产生负面影响,因为他们注意到,他们花费了更多的时间在那些对晋升可能并不重要的活动上。为了实现医疗机构内部的公平,必须解决这些负担问题。
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Perceptions of the Minority Tax Experienced by Faculty and Students Underrepresented in Medicine at the University of Wisconsin.

Introduction: The minority tax in academic medicine can be defined as the additional responsibilities placed on underrepresented in medicine (URiM) faculty, staff, and students in the name of diversity. Often this looks like participating in additional diversity committees, recruitment efforts, and mentorship activities. These extra responsibilities often are not recognized, not included in promotions, and take time from other clinical, research, and traditional scholarly responsibilities.

Objectives: There is a significant gap in the literature examining the experiences of URiM-identifying faculty and students in relation to the minority tax. Our goal was to do a quality improvement project to explore this gap through interviewing URiM-identifying faculty and conducting focus groups with URiM-identifying students, with the goal of making recommendations to help reduce the minority tax burdens to this community.

Methods: A scoping literature review on the minority tax burden in academic medicine was used to inform the development of questions to use in focus groups of URiM University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health (UWSMPH) students and interviews of URiM UWSMPH faculty members. After development of a facilitation guide, we conducted three 1-hour focus groups with 14 students who identified as URiM and did eight 30-minute interviews with faculty who identified as URiM. A codebook was generated using inductive analysis after reviewing transcripts. Coding was performed independently with 2 separate coders in order to ensure inter-coder reliability.

Results: Ninety-one percent of students and 62.5% of faculty endorsed experiencing the minority tax at UWSMPH. Faculty also reported increasing feelings of support due to UWSMPH programs that support URiM faculty. Students reported the minority tax being central to their role as URiM students. Both students and faculty reported that the additional burdens of the minority tax took time away from traditional scholarly activities that were essential for promotion (faculty) or residency (students).

Conclusions: The minority tax burden experienced by URiM faculty and students may negatively affect their careers, as they note spending more time on activities that may not be valued for promotion. It is essential to address these burdens in order to achieve equity within the medical institution.

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