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Sexual and gender minority health in medical curricula in new England: a pilot study of medical student comfort, competence and perception of curricula.

Nicole Sitkin ZelinCharlotte HastingsBrendin R Beaulieu-JonesCaroline ScottAna Rodriguez-VillaCassandra DuarteChristopher CalahanAlexander J Adami
Published in: Medical education online (2018)
The prevalence of self-reported comfort is greater than that of self-reported competence serving SGM patients in a convenience sample of New England allopathic medical students. The majority of participants reported insufficient curricular preparation to achieve the competencies necessary to care for SGM patients. This multi-institution pilot study provides preliminary evidence that further curriculum development may be needed to enable medical students to achieve core competencies in SGM health, as defined by AAMC. Further mixed methods research is necessary to substantiate and expand upon the findings of this pilot study. This pilot study also demonstrates the importance of creating specific evaluation tools to assess medical student achievement of competencies established by the AAMC.
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