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Proposing clinician competency guidelines for the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum of South Africa - an exploratory study

Introduction Persons with disability make up the largest minority group in the world yet there is a dearth of research both internationally and nationally on how disability is included in professional training curricula for medical doctors. Aim of the study The purpose of this study is to add to the...

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Main Author: Whitehead, Sarah Nicole
Other Authors: Kathard, Harsha
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Health Sciences Education 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Whitehead, Sarah Nicole
author2 Kathard, Harsha
author_browse Kathard, Harsha
Whitehead, Sarah Nicole
author_facet Kathard, Harsha
Whitehead, Sarah Nicole
author_sort Whitehead, Sarah Nicole
collection Thesis
description Introduction Persons with disability make up the largest minority group in the world yet there is a dearth of research both internationally and nationally on how disability is included in professional training curricula for medical doctors. Aim of the study The purpose of this study is to add to the body of knowledge that would facilitate the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum in South Africa. Methods This is a mixed method, sequential study – Phase one followed by Phase two. Phase one, data was collected - via focus groups and in-depth interviews - from Medical Doctors, Medical Students, Physiotherapists, Occupational Therapists, Speech and Language Therapists and Persons with disability. Phase two used a modified Delphi Method with an expert panel of disabled and abled Disability Studies Academics, Medical Educators, Disability Rights Activists and Medical Doctors. The experts were asked to rate – using a 5-point Likert Scale - each competency according to its importance and language clarity. They were also asked in open-ended questions, to make any suggestions relating to the language of each competency and whether any competencies could be combined. 2 Findings Four main themes emerged from Phase one data: Experience of disability, Attitudes towards disability, Knowledge about Disability and Life beyond the disability. Data from these four themes contributed to the generation of an initial competency set – 17 competencies and 13 sub-competencies. In Phase two the initial competency set was presented to an expert panel as part of a modified Delphi Method. In the first iteration consensus was regarding the importance of each competency. In the second iteration consensus was reached regarding the language of each competency and a final competency set – containing 13 competencies and 9 sub-competencies - was generated. Competencies and sub-competencies 1-6 are clustered as knowledge competencies, 7-10 as attitudes and 11-13 as skills. Conclusion This study sets an important precedent for the inclusion of the subject of disability in undergraduate medical curricula. It proposes an approach to teaching and learning about disability inclusion for medical students. The list of disability specific competencies set forth by this study are a steppingstone in the process of curriculum transformation. The use of this guideline to improve the understanding of disability, and as a catalyst for undergraduate medical curriculum review is recommended.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38550 Proposing clinician competency guidelines for the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum of South Africa - an exploratory study Whitehead, Sarah Nicole Kathard, Harsha Lorenzo, Theresa medical curriculum Introduction Persons with disability make up the largest minority group in the world yet there is a dearth of research both internationally and nationally on how disability is included in professional training curricula for medical doctors. Aim of the study The purpose of this study is to add to the body of knowledge that would facilitate the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum in South Africa. Methods This is a mixed method, sequential study – Phase one followed by Phase two. Phase one, data was collected - via focus groups and in-depth interviews - from Medical Doctors, Medical Students, Physiotherapists, Occupational Therapists, Speech and Language Therapists and Persons with disability. Phase two used a modified Delphi Method with an expert panel of disabled and abled Disability Studies Academics, Medical Educators, Disability Rights Activists and Medical Doctors. The experts were asked to rate – using a 5-point Likert Scale - each competency according to its importance and language clarity. They were also asked in open-ended questions, to make any suggestions relating to the language of each competency and whether any competencies could be combined. 2 Findings Four main themes emerged from Phase one data: Experience of disability, Attitudes towards disability, Knowledge about Disability and Life beyond the disability. Data from these four themes contributed to the generation of an initial competency set – 17 competencies and 13 sub-competencies. In Phase two the initial competency set was presented to an expert panel as part of a modified Delphi Method. In the first iteration consensus was regarding the importance of each competency. In the second iteration consensus was reached regarding the language of each competency and a final competency set – containing 13 competencies and 9 sub-competencies - was generated. Competencies and sub-competencies 1-6 are clustered as knowledge competencies, 7-10 as attitudes and 11-13 as skills. Conclusion This study sets an important precedent for the inclusion of the subject of disability in undergraduate medical curricula. It proposes an approach to teaching and learning about disability inclusion for medical students. The list of disability specific competencies set forth by this study are a steppingstone in the process of curriculum transformation. The use of this guideline to improve the understanding of disability, and as a catalyst for undergraduate medical curriculum review is recommended. 2023-09-12T09:33:52Z 2023-09-12T09:33:52Z 2023 2023-09-12T09:18:05Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38550 eng application/pdf Department of Health Sciences Education Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle medical curriculum
Whitehead, Sarah Nicole
Proposing clinician competency guidelines for the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum of South Africa - an exploratory study
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Proposing clinician competency guidelines for the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum of South Africa - an exploratory study
title_full Proposing clinician competency guidelines for the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum of South Africa - an exploratory study
title_fullStr Proposing clinician competency guidelines for the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum of South Africa - an exploratory study
title_full_unstemmed Proposing clinician competency guidelines for the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum of South Africa - an exploratory study
title_short Proposing clinician competency guidelines for the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum of South Africa - an exploratory study
title_sort proposing clinician competency guidelines for the inclusion of disability in the undergraduate medical curriculum of south africa an exploratory study
topic medical curriculum
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38550
work_keys_str_mv AT whiteheadsarahnicole proposingcliniciancompetencyguidelinesfortheinclusionofdisabilityintheundergraduatemedicalcurriculumofsouthafricaanexploratorystudy