The need for critical and intersectional approaches to equity efforts in postgraduate medical education: A critical narrative review

Author:

Lam Justin T. H.12ORCID,Coret Michal3ORCID,Khalil Carlos3,Butler Kat4,Giroux Ryan J.5,Martimianakis Maria Athina ( Tina)12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Paediatrics University of Toronto and Hospital for Sick Children Toronto Ontario Canada

2. Wilson Centre for Research in Education University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

4. Department of Anesthesiology University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

5. Department of Paediatrics University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundRacialised trainees in Canada and the USA continue to disproportionately experience discrimination and harassment in learning environments despite equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) reform efforts. Using critical approaches to understand what problems have been conceptualised and operationalised as EDI issues within postgraduate medical education (PGME) is important to inform ongoing learning environment reform in resident training.MethodsWe conducted a critical narrative review of EDI literature from 2009–2022 using critical race theory (CRT) and the concept of intersectionality to analyse how issues of discrimination in PGME have been studied. Our search yielded 2244 articles that were narrowed down to 349 articles for relevance to Canadian and American PGME contexts. We attended to reflexivity and our positionality in analysing the database and identifying themes related to EDI reform.ResultsInterest convergence was noted in how EDI reform was rationalised primarily by increased productivity. Problems of learner representation, gender inequities and curricular problems were conceptualised as EDI issues. The role that racism played in EDI‐related problems was largely invisible, as were explicit conceptualisations of race and gender as social constructs. Overall, there was a lack of critical or intersectional approaches in the literature reviewed. Misalignment was noted where studies would frame a problem through a critical lens, but then study the problem without attention to power.DiscussionInterest convergence and epistemic injustice can account for the absence of critical approaches due to the alignment of existing EDI work with institutional interests and priorities. Interest convergence conceptually limits existing EDI reform efforts in PGME. CRT and intersectionality connect racialised learner experiences to systemic phenomena like racism and other forms of discrimination to challenge dominant assumptions. Because they attend to power, critical approaches are key to understanding why inequities have persisted to advance equity in learning environments for racialised and intersectionally marginalised learners.

Funder

Arts and Humanities Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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