Diversity competence training for health professionals in Europe: a modified delphi study investigating relevant content for short or online courses

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Diversity competence training for health professionals in Europe : a modified delphi study investigating relevant content for short or online courses. / Sorensen, Janne; Michaëlis, Camilla; Olsen, Julie Marie Møller; Krasnik, Allan; Bozorgmehr, Kayvan; Ziegler, Sandra.

I: BMC Medical Education, Bind 23, Nr. 1, 590, 2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Sorensen, J, Michaëlis, C, Olsen, JMM, Krasnik, A, Bozorgmehr, K & Ziegler, S 2023, 'Diversity competence training for health professionals in Europe: a modified delphi study investigating relevant content for short or online courses', BMC Medical Education, bind 23, nr. 1, 590. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04563-z

APA

Sorensen, J., Michaëlis, C., Olsen, J. M. M., Krasnik, A., Bozorgmehr, K., & Ziegler, S. (2023). Diversity competence training for health professionals in Europe: a modified delphi study investigating relevant content for short or online courses. BMC Medical Education, 23(1), [590]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04563-z

Vancouver

Sorensen J, Michaëlis C, Olsen JMM, Krasnik A, Bozorgmehr K, Ziegler S. Diversity competence training for health professionals in Europe: a modified delphi study investigating relevant content for short or online courses. BMC Medical Education. 2023;23(1). 590. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04563-z

Author

Sorensen, Janne ; Michaëlis, Camilla ; Olsen, Julie Marie Møller ; Krasnik, Allan ; Bozorgmehr, Kayvan ; Ziegler, Sandra. / Diversity competence training for health professionals in Europe : a modified delphi study investigating relevant content for short or online courses. I: BMC Medical Education. 2023 ; Bind 23, Nr. 1.

Bibtex

@article{8341c52bb78041878eef4492e259e736,
title = "Diversity competence training for health professionals in Europe: a modified delphi study investigating relevant content for short or online courses",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Diversity is a reality in our societies, requiring health professionals to adapt to the unique needs of all patients, including migrants and ethnic minorities. In order to enable health professionals to meet related challenges and reduce health disparities, long and demanding training courses have been developed. But due to busy schedules of professionals and often scarce resources, a need for shorter training courses exists. This study aims to investigate which topics and methods should be prioritised in designing basic diversity training courses that provide health professionals the opportunity to foster this competence.METHODS: The study provided an expert panel of 31 academic and clinical migrant health experts with the content and methods of an existing diversity training course. The panel was asked to prioritise training topics and teaching methods in a two-stage process, using an adapted Delphi method. In the first stage, experts rated 96 predefined items, commented on those items, provided answers to eight open-ended questions and suggested additional content for a short course. In the second stage, they commented on the ratings from Round 1, and rated new suggested content. Consensus for training topics was set to 80% and for teaching methods 70%.RESULTS: The entire panel deemed 'health effects of migration (pre-, during- and post-migration risk factors)' to be important or very important to include in a short/online, basic diversity training (100% consensus). Other high-scoring items and therefore topics to be included in trainings were 'social determinants of health' (97%) and 'discrimination within the healthcare sector' (also 97%). A general trend was to focus on reflective practice since almost all items regarding reflection reached consensus. 'Reflection on own stereotypes and prejudices' (97%) was the highest-rated reflection item. 'Opportunities and best practices in working with interpreters' was the highest-scoring skills item, both on consensus (96%) and mean value (5.77).CONCLUSIONS: Experts' prioritizations of teaching content and methods for diversity training can help the design of short (online) trainings for health professionals and reduce unnecessary course content, thereby fostering professional development and enabling diversity competence trainings to be implemented also when time and/or financial resources are limited.",
author = "Janne Sorensen and Camilla Micha{\"e}lis and Olsen, {Julie Marie M{\o}ller} and Allan Krasnik and Kayvan Bozorgmehr and Sandra Ziegler",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1186/s12909-023-04563-z",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
journal = "BMC Medical Education",
issn = "1472-6920",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Diversity competence training for health professionals in Europe

T2 - a modified delphi study investigating relevant content for short or online courses

AU - Sorensen, Janne

AU - Michaëlis, Camilla

AU - Olsen, Julie Marie Møller

AU - Krasnik, Allan

AU - Bozorgmehr, Kayvan

AU - Ziegler, Sandra

N1 - © 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - BACKGROUND: Diversity is a reality in our societies, requiring health professionals to adapt to the unique needs of all patients, including migrants and ethnic minorities. In order to enable health professionals to meet related challenges and reduce health disparities, long and demanding training courses have been developed. But due to busy schedules of professionals and often scarce resources, a need for shorter training courses exists. This study aims to investigate which topics and methods should be prioritised in designing basic diversity training courses that provide health professionals the opportunity to foster this competence.METHODS: The study provided an expert panel of 31 academic and clinical migrant health experts with the content and methods of an existing diversity training course. The panel was asked to prioritise training topics and teaching methods in a two-stage process, using an adapted Delphi method. In the first stage, experts rated 96 predefined items, commented on those items, provided answers to eight open-ended questions and suggested additional content for a short course. In the second stage, they commented on the ratings from Round 1, and rated new suggested content. Consensus for training topics was set to 80% and for teaching methods 70%.RESULTS: The entire panel deemed 'health effects of migration (pre-, during- and post-migration risk factors)' to be important or very important to include in a short/online, basic diversity training (100% consensus). Other high-scoring items and therefore topics to be included in trainings were 'social determinants of health' (97%) and 'discrimination within the healthcare sector' (also 97%). A general trend was to focus on reflective practice since almost all items regarding reflection reached consensus. 'Reflection on own stereotypes and prejudices' (97%) was the highest-rated reflection item. 'Opportunities and best practices in working with interpreters' was the highest-scoring skills item, both on consensus (96%) and mean value (5.77).CONCLUSIONS: Experts' prioritizations of teaching content and methods for diversity training can help the design of short (online) trainings for health professionals and reduce unnecessary course content, thereby fostering professional development and enabling diversity competence trainings to be implemented also when time and/or financial resources are limited.

AB - BACKGROUND: Diversity is a reality in our societies, requiring health professionals to adapt to the unique needs of all patients, including migrants and ethnic minorities. In order to enable health professionals to meet related challenges and reduce health disparities, long and demanding training courses have been developed. But due to busy schedules of professionals and often scarce resources, a need for shorter training courses exists. This study aims to investigate which topics and methods should be prioritised in designing basic diversity training courses that provide health professionals the opportunity to foster this competence.METHODS: The study provided an expert panel of 31 academic and clinical migrant health experts with the content and methods of an existing diversity training course. The panel was asked to prioritise training topics and teaching methods in a two-stage process, using an adapted Delphi method. In the first stage, experts rated 96 predefined items, commented on those items, provided answers to eight open-ended questions and suggested additional content for a short course. In the second stage, they commented on the ratings from Round 1, and rated new suggested content. Consensus for training topics was set to 80% and for teaching methods 70%.RESULTS: The entire panel deemed 'health effects of migration (pre-, during- and post-migration risk factors)' to be important or very important to include in a short/online, basic diversity training (100% consensus). Other high-scoring items and therefore topics to be included in trainings were 'social determinants of health' (97%) and 'discrimination within the healthcare sector' (also 97%). A general trend was to focus on reflective practice since almost all items regarding reflection reached consensus. 'Reflection on own stereotypes and prejudices' (97%) was the highest-rated reflection item. 'Opportunities and best practices in working with interpreters' was the highest-scoring skills item, both on consensus (96%) and mean value (5.77).CONCLUSIONS: Experts' prioritizations of teaching content and methods for diversity training can help the design of short (online) trainings for health professionals and reduce unnecessary course content, thereby fostering professional development and enabling diversity competence trainings to be implemented also when time and/or financial resources are limited.

U2 - 10.1186/s12909-023-04563-z

DO - 10.1186/s12909-023-04563-z

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37605124

VL - 23

JO - BMC Medical Education

JF - BMC Medical Education

SN - 1472-6920

IS - 1

M1 - 590

ER -

ID: 362745221