Abstract

Abstract Background Thousands of students travel yearly from high-income countries (HICs) to low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) for short-term experiences in global health, with much less travel by LMIC students to HICs. Little structured research has been done to seek host perspectives, particularly from LMICs, on what they would like to teach learners. By seeking LMIC host perspectives, we aimed to improve global pedagogy, curriculum design, assessment, and experiential learning, better meeting host goals and expectations. Our additional aim was to improve mutual respect and trust, share power honestly and ethically, and facilitate more genuinely collaborative agenda setting between LMIC and HIC partners. Methods We previously did a hybrid quantitative and qualitative web-based survey from Sept 1, 2015, to Dec 31, 2015, exploring global competencies with particular attention to LMIC hosts supervising and housing trainees in short-term experiences in global 274 host perspectives were gleaned from 38 countries speaking 22 languages. In this qualitative study, we analysed open-ended questions and responses not previously covered from the same survey data. 97 of 274 responses were selected for qualitative analysis, conducted via content analysis and coding, ensuring inter-rater reliability, and comparing HIC and LMIC responses. Findings Four core themes emerged in our content analysis regarding desired global core competencies: most important global core competencies; biggest mistakes students make; biggest challenges students face; and what students should remember most in experiential global education. Interpretation Our qualitative study revealed intriguing comparative results addressing core controversies in global health, such as who does global health and where one must be to do global health. Moving forward we hope this initial survey research will facilitate more genuinely collaborative agenda setting between North–South and East–West partners. Funding Child Family Health International.

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