Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"health services" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Trends in missed paediatric preventive primary care visits during the COVID-19 pandemic using routinely collected electronic medical records in Ontario, Canada (2015-2022) Bayoumi I; Mcfadden K; Valkanas H; Tu K; Kalia S; Chen T; Christie CD; Rourke J; Rourke L; Greiver M; Leduc D; Li P; 41290264
CONCORDIA
2 Editorial: World mental health day 2022: key drivers of risk to mental health services and innovative solutions Shen N; Jilka S; Sawchuk K; 39100959
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Validating a Pragmatic Measure of Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) Delivery: Therapist Reports of EBP Strategy Delivery and Associations with Child Outcome Trajectories Lau AS; Lind T; Cox J; Motamedi M; Lui JHL; Chlebowski C; Flores A; Diaz D; Roesch S; Brookman-Frazee L; 39096408
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Factors associated with high use of general practitioner and psychiatrist services among patients attending an addiction rehabilitation center Hu?nh C; Ngamini Ngui A; Kairouz S; Lesage A; Fleury MJ; 27450676
SOCANTH
5 Toward a Culturally Responsive Model of Mental Health Literacy: Facilitating Help-Seeking Among East Asian Immigrants to North America Na S; Ryder AG; Kirmayer LJ; 27596560
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Teaching Culturally Safe Care in Simulated Cultural Communication Scenarios During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Virtual Visits with Indigenous Animators Maar M; McGregor L; Desjardins D; Delaney KZ; Bessette N; Reade M; 35392591
HKAP
7 Digital Game Interventions for Youth Mental Health Services (Gaming My Way to Recovery): Protocol for a Scoping Review. Ferrari M, McIlwaine SV, Reynolds JA, Archie S, Boydell K, Lal S, Shah JL, Henderson J, Alvarez-Jimenez M, Andersson N, Boruff J, Nielsen RKL, Iyer SN 32579117
CONCORDIA
8 Description, evaluation and scale-up potential of a model for rapid access to early intervention for psychosis. MacDonald K, Malla A, Joober R, Shah JL, Goldberg K, Abadi S, Doyle M, Iyer SN 29582562
CONCORDIA

 

Title:Teaching Culturally Safe Care in Simulated Cultural Communication Scenarios During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Virtual Visits with Indigenous Animators
Authors:Maar MMcGregor LDesjardins DDelaney KZBessette NReade M
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35392591/
DOI:10.1177/23821205221091034
Publication:Journal of medical education and curricular development
Keywords:MeSH terms: health servicescultural competencyindigenouspatient simulation
PMID:35392591 Category: Date Added:2022-04-08
Dept Affiliation: HKAP
1 Faculty of Medicine, Northern Ontario School of Medicine University, Sudbury, ON, Canada.
2 Department of Undergraduate Medical Education, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sudbury, ON, Canada.
3 Department of Health, Kinesiology and Applied Physiology, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.

Description:

Clinical learning activities involving Indigenous patient actors that specifically address the development of culturally safe care skills among medical students are important in order to improve health care for Indigenous people. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic led to strict physical distancing regulations and regional lockdowns that made the in-person delivery of Simulated Cultural Communication Scenarios (SCCS) with Indigenous patient actors impossible due to the disproportionate risk that public health emergencies pose for Indigenous communities. As the pandemic continued in 2021, we co-created a Virtual Visit approach to SCCS for the education of culturally safe care to pre-clerkship medical students. We report on student and tutor evaluation of these virtual sessions and contextualize our findings with our previous results delivering In-Person SCCSs. We found that Virtual Visit SCCS were highly effective in providing authentic exposure to and feedback from Indigenous patients. However, students rated their learning outcomes with Virtual Visit lower than the In-person approach to SCCS. We recommend formal training on interacting with patients in virtual care scenarios prior to Virtual Visit SCCS. We also found that exposure to SCCS with Indigenous animators has the potential to conjure up a diverse spectrum of sometimes unresolved negative feelings related to colonialism among students and tutors including discomfort, embarrassment, and anxiety. Our findings underscore the importance of resolving these sentiments within the safe environment of a classroom. To prepare Indigenous as well as non-Indigenous students and tutors adequately, it is important to acknowledge and critically deconstruct the embodiment of colonialism and Indigenous-settler relations when teaching physicians, as well as future physicians, preparedness for culturally safe care of Indigenous peoples.





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