Evaluation of the effectiveness of the Global Medical Student Partnership program in undergraduate medical education

Authors

  • Hannah Samuels University of Toronto
  • Vanessa Rojas-Luengas University of Toronto
  • Arman Zereshkian University of Toronto
  • Shirley Deng University of Toronto
  • Jenna Moodie University of Toronto
  • Paula Veinot
  • Ashna Bowry University of Toronto; Unity Health Toronto;
  • Marcus Law University of Toronto

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36834/cmej.69339

Abstract

Background: The Global Medical Student Partnership (GMSP) is, a medical student-led international initiative to promote accessible Global Health learning. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of the GMSP program in meeting its learning objectives.

Methods: Canadian and international medical student pairs met online monthly (January-May 2018) to discuss global health-related medical cases. Students then reviewed cases with local GMSP peers and faculty experts. A mixed-methods study was performed to evaluate whether the objectives of the program had been achieved. 26 of 32 (81.3%) students completed a questionnaire, and 13 (40.6%) also participated in one-on-one semi-structured interviews. Descriptive statistics and thematic analysis were used to analyze students’ perspectives on skill development through GMSP.

Results: GMSP students agreed or strongly agreed that international collaboration and communication skills were more important to them following program participation (92.3%, 92.3% respectively). Many expressed that after GMSP, they knew more about their healthcare system, practices abroad and how to solve complex health issues (92.3%, 84.6%, 61.5% respectively). Qualitative data showed GMSP improved students’ communication and presentation skills, provided a foundation for international relationships, fostered appraisal of diverse health systems, and furthered students’ understanding of health advocacy.

Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate that GMSP met its original objectives by providing students with opportunities to engage in international collaborations and to further develop their skills in advocacy, communication, and health-systems research. This program may be an important addition to medical education as it makes use of technology and peer-to-peer exchange to enable global health learning.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Published

2020-10-03

How to Cite

1.
Samuels H, Rojas-Luengas V, Zereshkian A, Deng S, Moodie J, Veinot P, Bowry A, Law M. Evaluation of the effectiveness of the Global Medical Student Partnership program in undergraduate medical education. Can. Med. Ed. J [Internet]. 2020 Oct. 3 [cited 2024 Nov. 27];11(6):e90-e98. Available from: https://dev.journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/cmej/article/view/69339

Issue

Section

Brief Reports

Most read articles by the same author(s)