Abstract

ABSTRACTBackground: Sexual and gender minority (SGM) individuals experience high rates of harassment and discrimination when seeking healthcare, which contributes to substantial healthcare disparities. Improving physician training about gender identity, sexual orientation, and the healthcare needs of SGM patients has been identified as a critical strategy for mitigating these disparities. In 2014, the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) published medical education competencies to guide undergraduate medical education on SGM topics.Objective: Conduct pilot study to investigate medical student comfort and competence about SGM health competencies outlined by the AAMC and evaluate curricular coverage of SGM topics.Design: Six-hundred and fifty-eight students at New England allopathic medical schools (response rate 21.2%) completed an anonymous, online survey evaluating self-reported comfort and competence regarding SGM health competencies, and coverage of SGM health in the medical curriculum.Results: 92.7% of students felt somewhat or very comfortable treating sexual minorities; 68.4% felt comfortable treating gender minorities. Most respondents felt not competent or somewhat not competent with medical treatment of gender minority patients (76.7%) and patients with a difference of sex development (81%). At seven schools, more than 50% of students indicated that the curriculum neither adequately covers SGM-specific topics nor adequately prepares students to serve SGM patients.Conclusions: The prevalence of self-reported comfort is greater than that of self-reported competence serving SGM patients in a convenience sample of New England allopathic medical students. The majority of participants reported insufficient curricular preparation to achieve the competencies necessary to care for SGM patients. This multi-institution pilot study provides preliminary evidence that further curriculum development may be needed to enable medical students to achieve core competencies in SGM health, as defined by AAMC. Further mixed methods research is necessary to substantiate and expand upon the findings of this pilot study. This pilot study also demonstrates the importance of creating specific evaluation tools to assess medical student achievement of competencies established by the AAMC.

Highlights

  • IntroductionSeventy percent of gender minority and over 50% of sexual minority individuals report experiencing harassment and discrimination while seeking healthcare [1]

  • Sexual and gender minority (SGM) individuals report substantial concerns about such past, and potential future, experiences. These concerns are linked to impaired patient-provider relationships and elevated rates of healthcare avoidance among SGM patients [1,2,3,4], which in turn contribute to health disparities between SGM and nonSGM patients [5,6]

  • Improving physician training about gender identity, sexual orientation, and the healthcare needs of SGM has been identified as a critical strategy for mitigating these disparities and improving the care delivered to SGM patients [6]

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Summary

Introduction

Seventy percent of gender minority and over 50% of sexual minority individuals report experiencing harassment and discrimination while seeking healthcare [1]. Sexual and gender minority (SGM) individuals report substantial concerns about such past, and potential future, experiences These concerns are linked to impaired patient-provider relationships and elevated rates of healthcare avoidance among SGM patients [1,2,3,4], which in turn contribute to health disparities between SGM and nonSGM patients [5,6]. Seventy percent of allopathic medical school deans rate their institution’s curricular coverage of SGM-specific health topics as very poor, poor or fair [7]. Improving physician training about gender identity, sexual orientation, and the healthcare needs of SGM patients has been identified as a critical strategy for mitigating these disparities. Design: Six-hundred and fifty-eight students at New England allopathic medical schools (response rate 21.2%) completed an anonymous, online survey evaluating self-reported comfort and competence regarding SGM health competencies, and coverage of SGM health in the medical curriculum

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