Stocktake Sale on now: wide range of books at up to 70% off!
Register      Login
Journal of Primary Health Care Journal of Primary Health Care Society
Journal of The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Patient representation in New Zealand general practice and rural health case-based teaching: a quality improvement exercise

Jessica Gu 1 , Jim Ross https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2636-7439 1 , Sharon Leitch https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9939-8773 1 *
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

1 Department of General Practice and Rural Health, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

* Correspondence to: sharon.leitch@otago.ac.nz

Handling Editor: Felicity Goodyear-Smith

Journal of Primary Health Care 15(3) 281-287 https://doi.org/10.1071/HC23070
Published: 7 August 2023

© 2023 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND)

Abstract

Introduction

Healthcare inequity disproportionately affects minority populations in Aotearoa New Zealand. Healthcare providers may contribute to inequity due to their biases. Medical education can unintentionally promote biases by reinforcing stereotypes or limiting exposure to diversity. Teaching staff from the Department of General Practice and Rural Health suggested a need to review current teaching materials to ascertain if they have the potential to contribute to this bias.

Aim

The aim of this study was to review case-based teaching material to determine its representation of the New Zealand population, and whether there is potential to contribute to implicit bias.

Methods

Document analysis of 135 cases used to teach fourth- and fifth-year medical students in the Department of General Practice and Rural Health, Otago Medical School was performed. Demographic, clinical and social features of each case were recorded and analysed.

Results

Cases typically included patient age (129/135, 95.6%), sex (127/135, 94.1%) and occupation status (91/136, 66.9%). Ethnicity (31/135, 23.0%), living situation (55/135, 40.7%), relationship status (57/135, 42.2%) and sexual orientation (52/135, 40.0%) were less frequently defined. Cases typically represented the population majority norms.

Discussion

Case-based teaching materials require regular review and updating to match population demographics. There is potential to improve representation of diversity, and hence cultural safety, though review and revision of written teaching cases.

Keywords: bias, clinical teaching, diversity, equity, inclusion, medical education, minority groups, New Zealand, representation.

References

Gonzalez CM, Kim MY, Marantz PR. Implicit bias and its relation to health disparities: a teaching program and survey of medical students. Teach Learn Med 2014; 26(1): 64-71.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Van Ryn M, Fu SS. Paved with good intentions: do public health and human service providers contribute to racial/ethnic disparities in health? Am J Public Health 2003; 93(2): 248-55.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Harrison LE, White BAA, Hawrylak K, et al. Explicit bias among fourth-year medical students. Bayl Univ Med Cent Proc 2019; 32(1): 50-3.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Phelan SM, Puhl RM, Burke SE, et al. The mixed impact of medical school on medical students’ implicit and explicit weight bias. Med Educ 2015; 49(10): 983-92.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Burke SE, Dovidio JF, Przedworski JM, et al. Do contact and empathy mitigate bias against gay and lesbian people among heterosexual first-year medical students? A report from the medical student CHANGE study. Acad Med 2015; 90(5): 645-51.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Jones R, Pitama S, Huria T, et al. Medical education to improve Māori health. N Z Med J 2010; 123(1316): 113-22.
| Google Scholar |

de Lusignan S, Tsang RSM, Akinyemi O, et al. Adverse events of interest following influenza vaccination in the first season of adjuvanted trivalent immunization: retrospective cohort study. JMIR Public Health Surveill 2022; 8(3): e25803.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Gonzalez CM, Lypson ML, Sukhera J. Twelve tips for teaching implicit bias recognition and management. Med Teach 2021; 43(12): 1368-73.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Hafferty FW. Beyond curriculum reform: confronting medicine’s hidden curriculum. Acad Med 1998; 73(4): 403-7.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

10  Wilby KJ, Cox D, Whelan AM, et al. Representation of diversity within written patient cases: exploring the presence of a “hidden curriculum”. J Am Coll Clin Pharm 2022; 5(8): 837-43.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

11  Harris R, Cormack D, Stanley J, et al. Ethnic bias and clinical decision-making among New Zealand medical students: an observational study. BMC Med Educ 2018; 18(1): 18.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

12  White-Davis T, Edgoose J, Brown Speights JS, et al. Addressing racism in medical education: an interactive training module. Fam Med 2018; 50(5): 364-8.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

13  Curtis E, Jones R, Tipene-Leach D, et al. Why cultural safety rather than cultural competency is required to achieve health equity: a literature review and recommended definition. Int J Equity Health 2019; 18(1): 174.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

14  Dawson J, Laccos-Barrett K, Hammond C, et al. Reflexive practice as an approach to improve healthcare delivery for indigenous peoples: a systematic critical synthesis and exploration of the cultural safety education literature. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2022; 19(11): 6691.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

15  Medical Council of New Zealand. Statement on cultural safety. Wellington: Medical Council of New Zealand; 2019.

16  Elliott TC. How do we move the needle? Building a framework for diversity, equity, and inclusion within graduate medical education. Fam Med 2021; 53(7): 556-8.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

17  Turbes S, Krebs E, Axtell S. The hidden curriculum in multicultural medical education: the role of case examples. Acad Med 2002; 77(3): 209-16.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

18  Williamson M, Walker T, Egan T, et al. The safe and effective clinical outcomes (SECO) clinic: learning responsibility for patient care through simulation. Teach Learn Med 2013; 25(2): 155-8.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

19  Harden RM. What is an OSCE? Med Teach 1988; 10(1): 19-22.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

20  Kremer LJ, Nguyen ALA, Waaka TA, et al. To what extent does a pharmacy curriculum foster diversity and inclusion through paper-based case scenarios? Pharm Educ 2021; 21(1): 612-20.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

21  Stats NZ. Census. 2022. Available at https://www.stats.govt.nz/topics/census#2018-census [cited 13 December 2022].

22  Stats NZ. Ariā. 2022. Available at https://www.stats.govt.nz/tools/aria [cited 12 December 2023].

23  Osborn DPJ, Marston L, Nazareth I, et al. Relative risks of cardiovascular disease in people prescribed olanzapine, risperidone and quetiapine. Schizophr Res 2017; 183: 116-23.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

24  Kurtz DLM, Janke R, Vinek J, et al. Health sciences cultural safety education in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States: a literature review. Int J Med Educ 2018; 9: 271-85.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

25  Amutah C, Greenidge K, Mante A, et al. Misrepresenting race — the role of medical schools in propagating physician bias. N Engl J Med 2021; 384(9): 872-8.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

26  Crampton P, Weaver N, Howard A. Holding a mirror to society? Progression towards achieving better sociodemographic representation among the University of Otago’s health professional students. N Z Med J 2018; 131(1476): 59-69.
| Google Scholar |

27  Ministry of Health. Sexually transmitted infections: findings from the 2014-2015 New Zealand health survey. Wellington: Ministry of Health; 2019.

28  Möller-Leimkühler AM. Gender differences in cardiovascular disease and comorbid depression. Dialogues Clin Neurosci 2007; 9(1): 71-83.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

29  Korpaisarn S, Safer JD. Gaps in transgender medical education among healthcare providers: a major barrier to care for transgender persons. Rev Endocr Metab Disord 2018; 19(3): 271-5.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

30  Stanley J, Semper K, Millar E, et al. Epidemiology of multimorbidity in New Zealand: a cross-sectional study using national-level hospital and pharmaceutical data. BMJ Open 2018; 8(5): e021689.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

31  Maguire S, Hanley K, Quinn K, et al. Teaching multimorbidity management to GP trainees: a pilot workshop. Educ Prim Care 2015; 26(6): 410-5.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

32  Fiscella K, Fremont AM. Use of geocoding and surname analysis to estimate race and ethnicity. Health Serv Res 2006; 0(4p1): 1482-500.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

33  Whitla DK, Orfield G, Silen W, et al. Educational benefits of diversity in medical school: a survey of students. Acad Med 2003; 78(5): 460-6.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

34  Naidu T, Abimbola S. How medical education holds back health equity. Lancet 2022; 400(10352): 556-7.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

35  Arruzza E, Chau M. The effectiveness of cultural competence education in enhancing knowledge acquisition, performance, attitudes, and student satisfaction among undergraduate health science students: a scoping review. J Educ Eval Health Prof 2021; 18: 3.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

36  Landry AM. Integrating health equity content into health professions education. AMA J Ethics 2021; 23(3): E229-34.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

37  Durie M. Cultural competence and medical practice in New Zealand. Australian and New Zealand Boards and Council Conference. Vol. 22. Wellington; 2001.