说明和分析多机构合作的过程:霍华德大学医院的经验教训。

Mansoor Malik, Suneeta Kumari, Partam Manalai, Maria Hipolito
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引用次数: 2

摘要

多机构合作提供了一种很有希望的方法,可以传播资源,用于能力建设和改进对新调查员和住院医生的培训,特别是在课程内容新颖的领域。在资源有限的时代,医生应该跟上课程内容的快速增长。在这种合作中,教育实体共同努力,共享资源和基础设施,这种合作已被用于保健,以提高护理质量、能力建设、缩小差距和住院医生培训。本文研究了耶鲁大学、乔治梅森大学(GMU)和霍华德大学(一所历史悠久的黑人大学)之间由联邦政府资助的跨机构合作项目STRIDE(寻求、治疗、接触以识别审前被告增强)。STRIDE研究合作的重点是参与CJS(刑事司法系统)的非洲裔美国人的心理健康、阿片类药物成瘾和传染病/艾滋病毒。我们讨论了在传统黑人学院和大学(HBCUs)进行的合作研究项目的一些挑战和好处,并强调了这种合作为居民和其他受训者创造的教育机会,通过多机构、结构化的合作研究,促进了独立研究者的发展。我们确定了一些独特的挑战,如物质使用、种族、耻辱、参与者中的监禁,以及参与机构之间的文化和权力差异,从而解决这些问题,以及它如何影响多机构合作努力的进程。
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Illustrating and analyzing the processes of multi-institutional collaboration: Lessons learnt at Howard University Hospital.

Multi-institutional collaboration offers a promising approach to the dissemination of resources for capacity building and the improvement of the training of new investigators and residents, especially in areas of novel curricular content. Physicians should keep pace with the rapid growth of curricular content in an era of restricted resources. Such collaborations, in which educational entities work together and share resources and infrastructure, have been employed in health care to improve quality of care, capacity building, disparity reduction, and resident training. This paper examines a federally funded multi-institutional collaboration for the project STRIDE (Seek, Treat, Reach to Identify Pretrial Defendants Enhancement) between Yale University, George Mason University (GMU), and Howard University, a Historically Black University. The STRIDE study collaboration focused on mental health, opioid addiction, and infectious disease/HIV among Africans Americans involved in CJS (Criminal Justice System). We discuss some of the challenges and benefits of collaborative research projects conducted at Historically Black Colleges and University (HBCUs) and highlight the educational opportunities created by such collaborations for residents and other trainees, leading to the development of independent investigators through multi-institutional, structured collaborative research. We identify some unique challenges such as substance use, race, stigma, incarceration among participants, and the cultural and power difference between participating institutions, and thereby address these issues and how it impacted the course of the multi-institutional collaborative effort.

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