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Education Scholarship Assessment Reconsidered: Expansion of Glassick's Criteria to Incorporate Health Equity.

Robyn BockrathCynthia OsmanJennifer TrainorHelen C WangUma Padhye PhatakDaniel G RichardsMeg G KeeleyEsther K Chung
Published in: Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges (2024)
Recent events have ignited widespread attention to structural racism and implicit bias throughout the U.S. health care system and medical institutions, resulting in a call for antiracism approaches to advance health equity. Medical education leaders are well positioned to advance health equity, not only through their training of fellows, residents, and medical students, but also in their approach to scholarship. Education scholarship drives innovation and critical evaluation of current practices; it impacts and intersects with multiple factors that have the potential to reduce health inequities. Thus, it is critical to prioritize the assessment of education scholarship through a health equity lens. Medical education scholarly dissemination has markedly expanded over the past 2 to 3 decades, yet medical educators have continued to embrace Boyer's and Glassick and colleagues' definitions of scholarship. The authors propose an approach to medical education scholarship assessment that expands each of Glassick's 6 existing criteria to address health inequities and adds health equity as a seventh criterion. With this, medical educators, researchers, reviewers, and others can consider how education scholarship affects diverse populations and settings, direct educational products and scholarship to address health inequities, and raise the importance of advancing health equity in medical education scholarship. By expanding and standardizing the assessment of scholarship to incorporate health equity, the medical education community can foster a cultural shift that brings health equity to the forefront of education scholarship.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • medical education
  • public health
  • mental health
  • health information
  • health promotion
  • primary care
  • global health
  • social media