PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Development of a curricular thread to foster medical students' critical reflection and promote action on climate change, health, and equity.

  • Trisha Dalapati,
  • Emily J Alway,
  • Sneha Mantri,
  • Phillip Mitchell,
  • Ian A George,
  • Samantha Kaplan,
  • Kathryn M Andolsek,
  • J Matthew Velkey,
  • Jennifer Lawson,
  • Andrew J Muzyk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0303615
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 5
p. e0303615

Abstract

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IntroductionDue to the health consequences arising from climate change, medical students will inevitably interact with affected patients during their training and careers. Accordingly, medical schools must incorporate education on the impacts of climate change on health and equity into their curricula. We created a curricular thread called "Climate Change, Health, and Equity" in the first-year preclinical medical program to teach foundational concepts and foster self-reflection and critical consciousness.MethodsThe authors developed a continuum of practice including administrators, educators and faculty members, students, and community partners to plan and design curricular activities. First-year medical students at Duke University School of Medicine participated in seven mandatory foundational lectures and two experiential learning opportunities in the local community. Following completion of activities, students wrote a critical reflection essay and completed a self-directed learning exercise. Essays were evaluated using the REFLECT rubric to assess if students achieved critical reflection and for thematic analysis by Bloom's Taxonomy.ResultsAll students (118) submitted essays. A random sample of 30 (25%) essays underwent analysis. Evaluation by the REFLECT rubric underscored that all students were reflecting or critically reflecting on thread content. Thematic analysis highlighted that all students (30/30, 100%) were adept at identifying new areas of medical knowledge and connecting concepts to individual experiences, institutional practices, and public health and policy. Most students (27/30; 90%) used emotionally laden words, expressing negative feelings like frustration and fear but also positive sentiments of solidarity and hope regarding climate change and effects on health. Many students (24/30; 80%) expressed actionable items at every level including continuing self-directed learning and conversing with patients, minimizing healthcare waste, and advocating for climate-friendly policies.ConclusionAfter participating in the curricular thread, most medical students reflected on cognitive, affective, and actionable aspects relating to climate change, health, and equity.