4.6 Article

Neighbourhood walking tours for physicians-in-training

Journal

POSTGRADUATE MEDICAL JOURNAL
Volume 98, Issue 1156, Pages 79-85

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/postgradmedj-2020-138914

Keywords

medical education & training; public health; social medicine

Funding

  1. Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine Department of Emergency Medicine
  2. Yale School of Medicine Department of Pediatrics
  3. Yale School of Medicine Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, Yale School of Medicine

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Social and economic factors significantly impact patient health. Neighbourhood walking tours have a positive impact on physician-residents' understanding of social determinants of health (SDoH) and knowledge of community resources.
Social and economic factors have a profound impact on patient health. However, education about these factors has been inconsistently incorporated into residency training. Neighbourhood walking tours may help physician-residents learn about the social determinants of health (SDoH). We assessed the impact of a neighbourhood walking tour on physician-residents' perceptions of SDoH, plans for counselling patients and knowledge of community resources. Using a community-based participatory research approach, in 2017 we implemented a neighbourhood walking tour curriculum for physician-residents in internal medicine, internal medicine/primary care, emergency medicine, paediatrics, combined internal medicine/paediatrics and obstetrics/gynaecology. In both pre-tour and post-tour, we asked participants to (1) rank the importance of individual-level and neighbourhood-level factors affecting patients' health, (2) describe strategies used to improve health behaviours and (3) describe knowledge of community resources. Eighty-one physician-residents participated in walks (pre-tour surveys (93% participation rate (n=75)), and post-tour surveys (53% participation rate (n=43)). Pre-tour, the factor ranked most frequently affecting patient health was 'access to primary care' (67%) compared with post-tour: 'income' (44%) and 'transportation' (44%). In describing ways to improve diet and exercise, among pre-tour survey respondents, 67% discussed individual-level strategies and 16% discussed neighbourhood-level, while among post-tour survey respondents, 39% of respondents discussed individual-level strategies and 37% discussed neighbourhood-level. Percentage of respondents aware of community resources changed from 5% to 76% (p<0.001). Walking tours helped physician-residents recognise the importance of SDoH and the value of community resources, and may have broadened frameworks for counselling patients on healthy lifestyles.

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