Data_Sheet_2_From the national to the local: Issues of trust and a model for community-academic-engagement.PDF
收藏frontiersin.figshare.com2023-06-01 更新2025-01-15 收录
下载链接:
https://frontiersin.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_Sheet_2_From_the_national_to_the_local_Issues_of_trust_and_a_model_for_community-academic-engagement_PDF/22154840/1
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Inequities in health and health care in the United States have persisted for decades, and the impacts on equity from the COVID-19 pandemic were no exception. In addition to the disproportionate burden of the disease across various populations, the pandemic posed several challenges, which exacerbated these existing inequities. This has undoubtedly contributed to deeply rooted public mistrust in medical research and healthcare delivery, particularly among historically and structurally oppressed populations. In the summer of 2020, given the series of social injustices posed by the pandemic and highly publicized incidents of police brutality, notably the murder of George Floyd, the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) enlisted the help of a national collaborative, the AAMC Collaborative for Health Equity: Act, Research, Generate Evidence (CHARGE)1 to establish a three-way partnership that would gather and prioritize community perspectives and lived experiences from multiple regions across the US on the role of academic medicals centers (AMCs) in advancing health and social justice. Given physical gathering constraints posed by the pandemic, virtual interviews were conducted with 30 racially and ethnically diverse community members across the country who expressed their views on how medical education, clinical care, and research could or did impact their health experiences. These interviews were framed within the context of the relationship between historically oppressed groups and the COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials underway. From the three-way partnership formed with the AAMC, AAMC CHARGE participants, and 30 community members from racially and ethnically diverse groups, qualitative methods provided lived experiences supporting other literature on the lack of trust between oppressed communities and AMCs. This led to the development of the Principles of Trustworthiness (PoT) Toolkit, which features ten principles inspired by community members' insights into how AMCs can demonstrate they are worthy of their community's trust2. In the end, the three-way partnership serves as a successful model for other national medical and health organizations to establish community engaged processes that elicit and prioritize lived experiences describing relationships between AMCs and oppressed communities.
美国在健康和医疗保健方面的不平等现象已持续数十年,COVID-19大流行对公平性的影响也不例外。除了疾病在不同群体中承担的不成比例的负担外,大流行还提出了多项挑战,这些挑战加剧了既有的不平等。这无疑加深了公众对医学研究和医疗服务的根本不信任,尤其是在历史上和结构上受到压迫的群体中。2020年夏季,鉴于大流行引发的系列社会不公和高度曝光的警察暴力事件,尤其是乔治·弗洛伊德的谋杀案,美国医学院协会(AAMC)招募了国家协作组织——美国医学院协会健康公平协作组织(CHARGE)1,旨在建立一个三方合作伙伴关系,以收集和优先考虑来自美国多个地区的社区观点和亲身体验,探讨学术医学中心(AMCs)在推进健康和社会正义中的作用。鉴于大流行导致的物理聚集限制,对全国30名种族和民族多元化的社区成员进行了虚拟访谈,他们表达了对医学教育、临床护理和研究如何或确实影响其健康体验的看法。这些访谈置于历史受压迫群体与正在进行中的COVID-19疫苗临床试验之间的关系背景下。通过与AAMC、AAMC CHARGE参与者和来自种族和民族多元化的30名社区成员形成的三方合作伙伴关系,定性方法提供了支持其他文献中关于受压迫社区与AMCs之间缺乏信任的亲身体验。这导致了信任原则(PoT)工具包的开发,该工具包包含十个原则,这些原则源于社区成员对AMCs如何展示其值得社区信任的洞察。最终,三方合作伙伴关系成为其他国家级医疗和健康组织建立社区参与流程的典范,这些流程旨在引发并优先考虑描述AMCs与受压迫社区之间关系的亲身体验。
提供机构:
Frontiers



