Sociodemographic disadvantage in the burden of stress and academic performance in medical school: implications for diversity in medicine.
Danielle EamesShelby ThomasKaden NormanEdward SimantonAnne WeismanPublished in: BMC medical education (2024)
Our results echo historic trends in academic performance for racial and ethnic minority students, and we present recent evidence of academic performance disparities based on age at matriculation. Residency program directors continue to use test scores as a primary metric to screen applicants and thus, poor academic performance has profound consequences on career trajectory. Finally, significantly higher stress in the first-generation students may be evidence of underlying psychological distress. Expanding the sociodemographic diversity among physicians, and by extension, medical students, has long been recognized as fundamental to addressing inequities in healthcare. However, results from our study suggest that aspects of medical education are unfavorable and disadvantageous for first-generation, URM, and older medical students. A deeper understanding of the interplay between sociodemographic characteristics and success in medical school is paramount as we pursue diversity in medicine.
Keyphrases
- medical students
- healthcare
- medical education
- primary care
- magnetic resonance
- physical activity
- high throughput
- high school
- stress induced
- middle aged
- computed tomography
- intellectual disability
- quality improvement
- magnetic resonance imaging
- depressive symptoms
- heat stress
- social media
- community dwelling
- single cell
- health information