4.6 Review

Teaching the social determinants of health through medical legal partnerships: a systematic review

Journal

BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12909-021-02729-1

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. NHLBI [K12HL137942]

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The authors conducted a systematic review to investigate the impact of medical legal partnerships on trainees' knowledge, attitudes, and future practice. The results showed that trainees participating in medical legal partnership programs demonstrated significant improvements in their abilities to identify and intervene on the social determinants of health in their patients.
Background: Undergraduate and graduate medical education often includes the social determinants of health, but questions remain regarding how best to ensure that trainees become empowered to take action on the social determinants of health in their future practice. The authors conducted a systematic review to better define the impact that educational programs centered on medical legal partnerships have on trainees' knowledge, attitudes and future practice. The authors sourced data from PubMed, Web of Science, Index to Legal Periodicals, LegalTrac, Google Scholar, Academic Search Complete, Business Source Complete, SocINDEX, SSRN, and Proquest Social Sciences. Selected studies included those centered on Medical Legal Partnerships in undergraduate or graduate medical education and that measured outcomes of the participating trainees. Two abstractors independently extracted information about the study population, setting, design, intervention and outcomes. Results: Six out of 483 studies met the inclusion criteria. One study highlighted four different MLPs, thus nine total MLP programs were included. Trainees included medical students as well as interns and residents from pediatrics, family medicine and internal medicine. Interventions ranged from didactic sessions, to advocacy projects, to handson community-based learning, to poverty simulation trainings. Benefits to trainees were wide in scope but all programs showed improvements in participants' understanding, comfort, confidence, and/or abilities in identifying and intervening on the social determinants of health in their patients. Conclusion: As medical schools and residency programs are increasingly considering how to effectively teach trainees to understand and address the social determinants of health, the findings in this systematic review suggest that inclusion of Medical Legal Partnerships into training programs is an effective approach.

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