Global Health Crisis, Global Health Response: How Global Health Experiences Prepared North American Physicians for the COVID-19 Pandemic

被引:0
作者
Alexandra L. Coria
Tracy L. Rabin
Amy R.L. Rule
Heather Haq
James C. Hudspeth
Leah Ratner
Ingrid Walker-Descartes
机构
[1] Maimonides Medical Center,Global Health Institute and Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine
[2] State University of New York Downstate College of Medicine,Office of Global Health & Yale Primary Care Internal Medicine Residency Program, Department of Internal Medicine
[3] Yale School of Medicine,Perinatal Institute and Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Pediatrics
[4] University of Cincinnati College of Medicine,Department of Pediatrics
[5] Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center,Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine
[6] Baylor College of Medicine International Pediatric AIDS Initiative (BIPAI) at Texas Children’s Hospital,Division of Respiratory Diseases
[7] Baylor College of Medicine,General Internal Medicine and Primary Care
[8] Boston University,Division of Medical Education
[9] Harvard Medical School,undefined
[10] Boston Children’s Hospital,undefined
[11] Brigham and Women’s Hospital,undefined
[12] Maimonides Children’s Hospital,undefined
来源
Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2022年 / 37卷
关键词
global health education; global health; medical education; COVID-19;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The COVID-19 pandemic plunged hospital systems into resource-deprived conditions unprecedented since the 1918 flu pandemic. It brought forward concerns around ethical management of scarcity, racism and distributive justice, cross-disciplinary collaboration, provider wellness, and other difficult themes. We, a group of medical educators and global health educators and clinicians, use the education literature to argue that experience gained through global health activities has greatly contributed to the effectiveness of the COVID-19 pandemic response in North American institutions. Support for global health educational activities is a valuable component of medical training, as they build skills and perspectives that are critical to responding to a pandemic or other health system cataclysm. We frame our argument as consideration of three questions that required rapid, effective responses in our home institutions during the pandemic: How can our health system function with new limitations on essential resources? How do we work at high intensity and volume, on a new disease, within new and evolving systems, while still providing high-quality, patient-centered care? And, how do we help personnel manage an unprecedented level of morbidity and mortality, disproportionately affecting the poor and marginalized, including moral difficulties of perceived care rationing?
引用
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页码:217 / 221
页数:4
相关论文
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