Student and Faculty Diversity is Insufficient to Ensure High-Quality Medical Spanish Education in US Medical Schools

Medical Spanish education aims to reduce linguistic barriers in healthcare and has historically been led by Hispanic/Latinx students and faculty, often without formal training or institutional support. We surveyed 158 US medical schools about their medical Spanish programs. We then examined national...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of immigrant and minority health 2021-10, Vol.23 (5), p.1105-1109
Hauptverfasser: Ortega, Pilar, Shin, Tiffany M., Francone, Nicolás O., Santos, Maria Paola, Girotti, Jorge A., Varjavand, Nielufar, Park, Yoon Soo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Medical Spanish education aims to reduce linguistic barriers in healthcare and has historically been led by Hispanic/Latinx students and faculty, often without formal training or institutional support. We surveyed 158 US medical schools about their medical Spanish programs. We then examined national trends in Underrepresented in Medicine and Hispanic/Latinx faculty and students as factors associated with meeting medical Spanish basic standards for curricula, educators, assessment, and course credit. We received responses from 125 schools (79%), of which 98 (78%) reported offering some form of medical Spanish. Schools with greater racial/ethnic diversity were more likely to have medical Spanish required courses (P-values 
ISSN:1557-1912
1557-1920
DOI:10.1007/s10903-021-01198-4