Rewriting the Hidden Curriculum via Addiction Consult Services: Meeting Patients Where They Are At.
Alёna A BalasanovaKellene V EagenDavid E MarcovitzPublished in: Journal of general internal medicine (2023)
Addiction Consult Services (ACS) deliver evidence-based care for patients with substance use disorder (SUD) during the course of general hospital admissions. Stigma toward patients with SUD is a known phenomenon and is part of the "hidden curriculum" that permeates medical training and healthcare settings. ACS have the potential to rewrite the hidden curriculum around SUD and to teach medical students and other trainees how to compassionately care for this patient population. Here, the authors explore the role of stigma within the hidden curriculum of medical training and outline how ACS can successfully contribute to combatting this stigma. The authors highlight two institutions' approaches to educational initiatives that incorporate health professional trainees into ACS. The authors end by providing a vision of how expansion of ACS can promote interdisciplinary learning for healthcare providers amidst the changing landscape of SUD treatment in the USA.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- medical students
- acute coronary syndrome
- quality improvement
- mental health
- medical education
- mental illness
- end stage renal disease
- social support
- hiv aids
- chronic kidney disease
- emergency medicine
- affordable care act
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- newly diagnosed
- virtual reality
- case report
- general practice
- public health
- peritoneal dialysis
- combination therapy
- human immunodeficiency virus
- depressive symptoms
- patient reported outcomes
- chronic pain