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Organisational perspectives on addressing differential attainment in postgraduate medical education: a qualitative study in the UK
- Source :
- BMJ Open
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- ObjectivesTo explore how representatives from organisations with responsibility for doctors in training perceive risks to the educational progression of UK medical graduates from black and minority ethnic groups (BME UKGs), and graduates of non-UK medical schools (international medical graduates (IMGs)). To identify the barriers to and facilitators of change.DesignQualitative semistructured individual and group interview study.SettingPostgraduate medical education in the UK.ParticipantsIndividuals with roles in examinations and/or curriculum design from UK medical Royal Colleges. Employees of NHS Employers.ResultsRepresentatives from 11 medical Royal Colleges (n=29) and NHS Employers (n=2) took part (55% medically qualified, 61% male, 71% white British/Irish, 23% Asian/Asian British, 6% missing ethnicity). Risks were perceived as significant, although more so for IMGs than for BME UKGs. Participants based significance ratings on evidence obtained largely through personal experience. A lack of evidence led to downgrading of significance. Participants were pessimistic about effecting change, two main barriers being sensitivities around race and the isolation of interventions. Participants felt that organisations should acknowledge problems, but felt concerned about being transparent without a solution; and talking about race with trainees was felt to be difficult. Participants mentioned 63 schemes aiming to address differential attainment, but these were typically local or specialty-specific, were not aimed at BME UKGs and were largely unevaluated. Participants felt that national change was needed, but only felt empowered to effect change locally or within their specialty.ConclusionsRepresentatives from organisations responsible for training doctors perceived the risks faced by BME UKGs and IMGs as significant but difficult to change. Strategies to help organisations address these risks include: increased openness to discussing race (including ethnic differences in attainment among UKGs); better sharing of information and resources nationally to empower organisations to effect change locally and within specialties; and evaluation of evidence-based interventions.
- Subjects :
- Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
020205 medical informatics
Attitude of Health Personnel
media_common.quotation_subject
education
Psychological intervention
Specialty
Ethnic group
02 engineering and technology
Racism
quality in health care
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Risk Factors
medical education & training
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
Medicine
Humans
030212 general & internal medicine
Foreign Medical Graduates
equality
Curriculum
Health policy
Qualitative Research
media_common
Medical education
Xenophobia
business.industry
Research
health policy
General Medicine
Focus Groups
Medical Education and Training
Focus group
United Kingdom
Career Mobility
Education, Medical, Graduate
differential attainment
ethnicity
business
Qualitative research
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20446055
- Volume :
- 8
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMJ open
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....98c3a0e28c90a7966e1dc128f847cd7b