MedEdPublish (Apr 2021)

Vigilance, Resilience, and Intent to Pursue Medicine Among Underrepresented Students

  • Daniella Ortiz,
  • Niki Matusko,
  • Janice Vallie,
  • Julie Burdine,
  • Jonathan Finks,
  • Gurjit Sandhu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1

Abstract

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It is crucial that we understand what challenges still exist for underrepresented in medicine (URiM) students on the path to medicine in order to design more effective pipeline programs. Resilience and its relationship to success in medicine is a growing area of interest in medical education, and the concept of vigilance has been studied in the context of the health of racialized groups. We sought to measure the roles of resilience and vigilance on URiM students’ commitment to entering the medical field as well as the relationship between these two factors. A survey including the 10- item Connor Davidson Resilience Scale, the abbreviated Heightened Vigilance Scale, and questions measuring perceptions of everyday discrimination and intentions to pursue medicine was distributed to participants of Doctors of Tomorrow, a University of Michigan Medical School pipeline program focused on high school and undergraduate students. We detected significant relationship between resilience and intention to pursue medicine via Fisher’s exact test (p=0.004). There was no significant relationship between vigilance and intention to pursue medicine nor between vigilance and resilience. We conclude that including resilience development for URiM students in pipeline program curricula could enhance URiM student matriculation to medical school.

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