Measuring social accountability in health professional education: Development and international pilot testing of an evaluation framework

2012 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah L. Larkins ◽  
Robyn Preston ◽  
Marie C. Matte ◽  
Iris C. Lindemann ◽  
Rex Samson ◽  
...  
2013 ◽  
Vol 35 (6) ◽  
pp. 490-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger Strasser ◽  
John C. Hogenbirk ◽  
Bruce Minore ◽  
David C. Marsh ◽  
Sue Berry ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 238212052094359
Author(s):  
Carole Reeve ◽  
Karen Johnston ◽  
Louise Young

Remote health has been differentiated from rural health in Australia and defined as isolated, with poor service access and a relatively high proportion of Indigenous residents, necessitating different models of care. Educational strategies for remote health practice are often needs driven and the characteristics of remote health may be used to categorise remote health professional education. This scoping review aims to identify the purpose of health professional education for remote settings, the type of educational strategies implemented and the reported outcomes. A broad search of published literature available in online bibliographic databases was conducted. A total of 33 articles met the review inclusion criteria. A further 7 articles were identified for inclusion in the review through citation searches and the authors’ networks giving a total of 40 articles. Six primary themes were established based on the educational purpose: (1) cultural competency; (2) social accountability; (3) rural and remote skill development for the general workforce; (4) remote specialisation; (5) specialist skills required for a remote workforce; and (6) remote teaching. These themes also reflect the philosophical change over time recognising remote health as a separate discipline and its value as a distinctive and efficacious learning environment. The concept of education for remote practice is proposed to describe this unique leaning environment which encompasses critical pedagogy to develop a sense of agency and social accountability, embedding the delivery of primary health care through service learning and developing relationships in a context which is transformative.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Ross

Social accountability has become an important philosophy driving the development of health professional education which is responsive to the needs of the wider community. Although the inention to be socially accountable is usually expressed at the level of the institution, the institution’s educational mission is carried out largely by its faculty. Moreover, while the actions of a socially accountable educational institution have been well described, what individual faculty should do to support such a mission is much less clear. This paper summarises the literature surround community-responsive education and makes recommendations regarding how faculty should act to support social accountability including a commitment to community-service as a professional value, seeing oneself as part of the wider community rather than distinct from it, being actively community engaged, measuring success by means of community impact, and being involved in the internal governance and leadership of the institution.


BMJ Open ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. e043970
Author(s):  
Brittany Buffone ◽  
Ilena Djuana ◽  
Katherine Yang ◽  
Kyle J Wilby ◽  
Maguy S El Hajj ◽  
...  

ObjectivesThe global distribution of health professionals and associated training programmes is wide but prior study has demonstrated reported scholarship of teaching and learning arises from predominantly Western perspectives.DesignWe conducted a document analysis to examine authorship of recent publications to explore current international representation.Data sourcesThe table of contents of seven high-impact English-language health professional education journals between 2008 and 2018 was extracted from Embase.Eligibility criteriaThe journals were selected according to highest aggregate ranking across specific scientific impact indices and stating health professional education in scope; only original research and review articles from these publications were included for analysis.Data extraction and synthesisThe table of contents was extracted and eligible publications screened by independent reviewers who further characterised the geographic affiliations of the publishing research teams and study settings (if applicable).ResultsA total 12 018 titles were screened and 7793 (64.8%) articles included. Most were collaborations (7048, 90.4%) conducted by authors from single geographic regions (5851, 86%). Single-region teams were most often formed from countries in North America (56%), Northern Europe (14%) or Western Europe (10%). Overall lead authorship from Asian, African or South American regions was less than 15%, 5% and 1%, respectively. Geographic representation varied somewhat by journal, but not across time.ConclusionsDiversity in health professional education scholarship, as marked by nation of authors’ professional affiliations, remains low. Under-representation of published research outside Global North regions limits dissemination of novel ideas resulting in unidirectional flow of experiences and a concentrated worldview of teaching and learning.


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