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Ethnic disparities in undergraduate pre-clinical and clinical performance

机译:本科生临床前和临床表现的种族差异

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Context Research from numerous medical schools has shown that students from ethnic minorities underperform compared with those from the ethnic majority. However, little is known about why this underperformance occurs and whether there are performance differences among ethnic minority groups. Objectives This study aimed to investigate underperformance across ethnic minority groups in undergraduate pre-clinical and clinical training. Methods A longitudinal prospective cohort study of progress on a 6-year undergraduate medical course was conducted in a Dutch medical school. Participants included 1661 Dutch and 696 non-Dutch students who entered the course over a consecutive 6-year period (2002-2007). Main outcome measures were performance in Year1 and in the pre-clinical and clinical courses. Odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated by logistic regression analysis for ethnic subgroups (Surinamese/Antillean, Turkish/Moroccan/African, Asian, Western) compared with Dutch students, adjusted for age, gender, pre-university grade point average (pu-GPA), additional socio-demographic variables (first-generation immigrant, urban background, first-generation university student, first language, medical doctor as parent) and previous performance at medical school. Results Compared with Dutch students, Surinamese and Antillean students specifically underperformed in the Year1 course (pass rate: 37% versus 64%; adjusted OR 0.40, 95% CI 0.27-0.60) and the pre-clinical course (pass rate: 19% versus 41%; adjusted OR 0.57, 95% CI 0.35-0.93). On the clinical course all non-Dutch subgroups were less likely than Dutch students to receive a grade of ≥8.0 (at least three of five grades: 54-77% versus 88%; adjusted ORs: 0.17-0.45). Conclusions Strong ethnic disparities exist in medical school performance even after adjusting for age, gender, pu-GPA and socio-demographic variables. More subjective grading cannot be ruled out as a cause of lower grades in clinical training, but other possible explanations should be studied further to mitigate the disparities.
机译:背景众多医学院的研究表明,与少数族裔学生相比,少数族裔学生表现不佳。但是,人们对于这种表现不佳的原因以及少数族裔群体之间的表现差异知之甚少。目的本研究旨在调查在临床前和临床培训中少数族裔群体的表现不佳。方法在荷兰医学院对6年制本科医学课程的进展进行纵向前瞻性队列研究。参加者包括1661名荷兰人和696名非荷兰学生,他们连续6年(2002-2007年)参加了该课程。主要结局指标是一年级以及临床前和临床课程的表现。通过Logistic回归分析,与荷兰学生相比,对种族子群体(苏里南/安的列斯,土耳其/摩洛哥/非洲,亚洲,西方)进行了Logistic回归分析,估算了具有95%置信区间(CI)的几率(OR)。大学平均成绩(pu-GPA),其他社会人口统计学变量(第一代移民,城市背景,第一代大学生,第一语言,作为父母的医生)以及以前在医学院的表现。结果与荷兰学生相比,苏里南和安的列斯群岛学生在1年级课程中的表现特别差(及格率:37%对64%;校正后的OR 0.40,95%CI 0.27-0.60)和临床前课程(及格率:19%对41%;调整后的OR为0.57,95%CI为0.35-0.93)。在临床课程中,所有非荷兰亚组的荷兰人接受≥8.0评分的可能性均小于荷兰学生(五个年级中的至少三个:54-77%对88%;调整后的OR:0.17-0.45)。结论即使对年龄,性别,pu-GPA和社会人口统计学变量进行了调整,医学院的表现仍存在强烈的种族差异。在临床培训中,不能排除主观评分较高的原因,但应进一步研究其他可能的解释以缓解这种差异。

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