In this study, we integrated CCC issues into the scenarios of three block’s PBL sessions to foster students’ awareness and learning of these CCC topics in the preclinical curriculum through the lens of the conscious competence framework. We then examined quantitatively and qualitatively the effectiveness of including these sociocultural elements through students’ and tutors’ perspectives. Thus far, this paper has laid out quantitative and qualitative findings from medical students and PBL tutors. We now triangulate both sets of results and consider the implications from four aspects: (i) effectiveness of PBL in raising awareness of the impact of diversity on healthcare, (ii) gap in students’ CCC learning experiences, (iii) tutors’ competence in guidance, and (iv) integration of proper CCC issues into PBL.
Effectiveness of PBL in raising awareness of the impact of diversity on healthcare
The findings showed that CCC-integrated PBL allowed students to be more aware of diverse cultural groups’ healthcare needs and prepared them for clinical learning. Although students had some difficulty engaging in in-depth discussions of CCC issues and some tutors raised the concern that it was challenging for students to do so without patient encounters, this integration nevertheless offered opportunities for preclinical students to be introduced to some CCC topics they are unfamiliar with. Placed within the conscious competency framework, students can acquire relevant knowledge and skills that enable them to transfer and respond to similar CCC situations as they become more situated through individual and collaborative learning. As learning and development of adaptive expertise are gradual processes (Lajoie and Gube, 2018), Whether students were able to reach the higher competency levels might not be clear in our study. However, students’ identification of impactive issues and patient needs post-session demonstrated that they were able to establish some foundational knowledge and awareness of CCC. Having systematic and repeated learning of CCC topics would also allow them to accumulate necessary knowledge and skills they can transform, adapt, and apply to different situations in the clinical environment (Mylopoulos and Regehr, 2009; Kua et al., 2021).
As posited in cognitive learning theories (Hmelo-Silver C. E. and Eberbach, 2012), CCC-integrated PBL sessions provided space for students to reflect on their own thinking through metacognition, and recognize their own perceptions, biases and stereotypes of diverse cultural groups. This reflection is especially important as biases and stereotypes held by healthcare providers likely have negative consequences on care quality, healthcare equities, physician-patient communication, and treatment of patients from diverse cultural groups (Hall et al., 2015; FitzGerald and Hurst, 2017). In our study, students’ recognition of their own biases and observation of peers’ responses further demonstrated the value of incorporating CCC issues into PBL sessions as they were able to increase their awareness of sociocultural issues discussed.
Varying from traditional PBL sessions or lectures, CCC-integrated PBL sessions provided students explorative learning environment that enable them to draw from their own knowledge of and experiences with diverse cultural groups, to learn interactively with peers and tutors, and to readjust their own perceptions and values. Medical students’ abilities to engage in these steps are critical as encounters with culturally diverse patients are inevitable in future clinical practice.
In short, our findings showed CCC-integrated PBL sessions were still relatively effective in helping students to strengthen their cultural awareness, be more conscious of biases and stereotypes associated with diverse cultural groups, and in improving students’ development of competence and adaptive expertise. Despite the effectiveness in raising students’ awareness, we were aware, however, that several issues emerged and questions remain about how CCC topics can be better integrated. In the following sections, we discuss some concerns that need to be addressed in future course design.
Gap identified in students’ CCC learning experiences
The quantitative data showed students and tutors generally agreed that some CCC elements have been included, albeit sparsely and inadequately, in the medical curriculum. Tutor and students, however, raised different viewpoints regarding students’ CCC preparedness and learning experiences in PBL sessions. Firstly, tutors showed their hesitation about students’ preparedness in the quantitative data, which resonated with the results from previous studies (Lu P. Y. et al., 2014; Lu P.Y. et al., 2021) and the qualitative data. Qualitative analysis revealed that although students were generally able to identify CCC-related patient care issues (i.e. decision-making pattern, bias, language, and gender issues) from the scenarios and exhibit some awareness and sensitivity to these issues, some tutors still believed there is a gap to bridge as most students considered CCC solely meant equal treatment without any differentiation. This is comparable with findings from previous studies (Worden and Ait-Daoud Tiouririne, 2018; Lu P. Y. et al., 2022; Verdonk et al., 2009) in which students were unaware of patients’ sociocultural background or felt treating all patients equally regardless of culture or background would help doctors avoid holding preconceived bias and negative stereotypes against certain patient groups. In these instances, students would unlikely notice or even risk aggravating cultural barriers that contribute to health disparities.
Secondly, tutors and students identified different challenges they encountered. While tutors indicated limited time to discuss CCC topics or packed curriculum to be reasons for students’ lack of proactive discussions, students mentioned about not having enough content to discuss due to insufficient knowledge and prior training. Placed within the conscious competency framework, these students are demonstrating their conscious incompetence in acknowledging that they have insufficient knowledge, but were unsure of how to respond effectively (Lane and Roberts, 2022). Moreover, since PBL’s student-centered approach deviates from the predominantly teacher-centered, lectured-based pedagogy observed in East Asian countries (Shimizu et al., 2019), having to frame switch to other learning modes might partially explain why students had difficulty in engaging in ongoing discussions of CCC topics. Findings from various research also implicated the need to consider how Asian communication styles and cultural factors shape PBL processes in Asian countries (Frambach et al., 2019; Gwee, 2008). As some previous research suggested, Asian students tend to be rote and passive learners who are more concerned with absorbing knowledge (Tavakol and Dennick, 2010). Thus, the level of effectiveness and the extent in which students can actively participate in the more explorative structured CC-integrated PBL sessions will require further consideration. These insights are helpful for tutors to determine effective approaches to facilitate student discussions and remind medical educators to consider both tutors’ and students’ underlying concerns when developing appropriate course designs that maximize students’ learning of CCC. Apart from concerns about students’ participation in CCC discussion, the tutors’ abilities to guide student discussions also plays a crucial role.
Competence in guiding CCC issues in PBL
Influenced by the development of medical professionalism in North America (AAMC, 2011), Taiwan’s medical education began to recognize the need to prepare students to provide quality care to diverse patient groups roughly a decade ago. Developing students’ cultural competence in medical education was seen as an important element for medical education (Ho Ming-Jung et al., 2011) and was included in the standards for medical school accreditation (TMAC, 2013, 2020). However, findings from this study revealed concerns about whether tutors themselves are ready to guide discussions on cultural competence. For instance, a tutor in our study had misunderstood the meaning of CCC, but based on the authors’ previous research findings, this confusion is not uncommon among faculty members (Lu P. Y. et al., 2014). Previous research also found medical teachers reported having limited previous training in cultural competence and insufficient knowledge and skills in teaching cultural competence (Hordijk et al., 2019). Facilitation of CCC discussion appeared challenging for some tutors who might not be familiar with the CCC issues discussed. This raises the issue of who should facilitate discussions if tutors themselves report having inadequate knowledge and experience. Nevertheless, students still benefit by having both tutors of basic and clinical sciences facilitate discussions as tutors’ diverse backgrounds provided more holistic perspectives from different disciplines. However, the effectiveness of this facilitation pairing will require further investigation in future studies. To provide more effective facilitation of student discussions, these tutors would benefit from having more self-learning or training opportunities as CCC issues are sometimes complex for the teachers themselves.
In our institution, before PBL sessions begin, tutors usually attended a pre-PBL training session in which they reviewed the cases with tutor guides. These sessions, however, were not observed to be attended by every tutor who facilitated group discussions and were often conducted very close to the start of PBL sessions, leaving tutors little turnaround time for preparation. Since most tutors did not receive training on CCC themselves and typically pull their knowledge of these topics from their own experiences, tutors’ varying experiences would lead them to adopt different definitions and subjective approaches that contribute to students’ level of participation or engagement. As such, findings from Shields et al. (2009) showed tutors’ participation in a faculty development program that encourage the discussion of CCC topics in a clinical course was effective in improving students’ awareness of these topics. Hence, encouraging or requiring tutors to attend pre-PBL CCC training sessions can improve guidance to facilitate students’ discussion while also allowing them to complement the other tutor’s expertise. Moreover, using tools such as the Tool for Assessing Cultural Competence Training (TACCT) (Lie et al., 2006) can help tutors identify specific competencies and construct frameworks that can be extended to their facilitation of particular CCC issues.
Integrating proper CCC issues into PBL
Concerns raised previously indicate much effort is needed to construct clearer guidelines for integrating proper CCC issues into PBL scenarios. As local, cultural contexts likely trigger varying perspectives from students and tutors, especially when the issues discussed deal with CCC, the need for clearer guidelines that align with these local contexts is essential.
Some steps can be considered when constructing PBL scenarios. First, appropriate social or cultural topics for different blocks need to be identified. Second, good PBL cases were shown to integrate elements of basic and clinical sciences, professionalism, psychosocial components, empathy, and shared decision making (Azer et al., 2012). In scenario writing, teachers are advised to identify learning topics discussed, incorporate elements associated with psychosocial components, adapt scenarios to fit local sociocultural contexts, and avoid stereotypes or biases. Third, as teachers of clinical sciences, basic sciences, and humanities have expertise in different areas, collaboration will provide more holistic perspectives on how CCC topics with more clinical relevance can be better designed and integrated into PBL scenarios. Fourth, medical education programs can consider developing handbooks or guidelines to provide teachers with fundamental guidelines on how to incorporate CCC contents into scenarios.
Limitations
Several limitations in terms of representativeness should be recognized. The study was conducted in a single medical school, which may limit the generalizability of our results. However, we have reasons to believe perspectives conveyed by respondents in our institution still align with those held by other Taiwanese medical school students and tutors. Since Taiwanese medical schools use uniform selection criteria in student acceptance, the perspectives presented by students and tutors may be generalizable to those from individuals at other schools. In addition, both tutors of basic and clinical sciences were included in our quantitative and qualitative data to provide a better summation of the diverse experiences of their views on integrating CCC issues, which might highlight points that need further consideration in future studies.