Jessica Evert, MD, Executive Director, Child Family Health International, Faculty, UCSF Department of Family and Community Medicine
I received an email from a US undergraduate student in April 2013 that read:
Child Family Health International (CFHI) is a UN-recognized non-profit organization with over 25 Global Health Education Programs in 7 countries. CFHI has been providing Global Service-Learning for over 22 years for students from undergraduate to post-graduate levels and university partners. To find out more visit www.cfhi.org.
Interested in more global-health related resources from globalsl.org? Take a look at:
“I am trying to establish a long-term and impactful relationship between the [my school’s] student body and the villages and small towns of South Africa. [My school’s] students, who have a reputation for being extremely medically-driven, would be very interested in serving the communities medically, whether it is through patient advocacy, disease/illness awareness, or being able to directly participate in minor surgeries and procedures.”
The email went on to ask me if the student could partner with Child Family Health International (CFHI), the Global Health education organization I steer, to make his interests a reality (my response probing his motivations went unanswered). This email has stuck with me as it captures the underlying curiosity, naiveté, and mis-interpretation that results in ‘service-learning’ within medical and public health setting becoming a dis-service. What is problematic with this student’s interests? Can you pick out the ‘red flag’ that all international educators, faculty and advisors should be able to immediately recognize and probe further? What subtleties indicate this student may have self-centered motivations veiled by a desire to serve? The tensions between the good intentions of Global Service-Learning (as a field, pedagogy, and movement) and the too often harmful manifestations of it in resource-restricted healthcare settings have several very concrete causes. Before I go into these causes, let’s further define resource-restricted healthcare setting. I am referring to any clinical (hospital, health center, clinic, mobile outreach) or public health setting where patients have less power than is optimal, limited or no choice in who provides their care, scant access to healthcare or choice in where they go to receive care, suboptimal understanding or means to assess the expertise/experience of the person providing their care, and/or other reasons to lack empowerment and opportunity to provide informed consent. The causes of Global Service-Learning becoming a dis-service in healthcare settings include:- The mis-interpretation of the concept of “service.”
- Actions based on curiosity about what it’s like to provide medical care, dispense medications, and take part in other hands-on healthcare activities usually reserved for licensed, professionally educated individuals, or clinical medical trainees.
- Exploitation (either conscious or sub-conscious) of resource-restricted settings to get hands-on patient care experience that would not be allowed in high-resource or optimally regulated settings. This is often done, in part, to boost applications to medical school or other post-graduate training.
4. Naiveté that results in thinking medical care, regardless of who provides it, is always beneficial.
The world’s poor, whether in our own backyard, or in a community across the globe, have been victims of the notion that any medical care, regardless of how and who provides it, is a good thing. More contemporary understanding of global health and development, as well as critical examinations of short-term global health activities, point out significant opportunity costs and potential downfalls of such care. This not only includes patients who undergo unnecessary pain, such as the women who gets a pap smear done by a male undergraduate student who has never held a speculum (a true story relayed by an academic advisor), it also includes false reassurance. False reassurance results from patients being given a sense that they are ‘ok’ when in fact they just didn’t receive a competent or thorough enough assessment to detect disease. For instance, this can occur if an undergraduate student who is new to measuring blood pressures, inaccurately measures a patient’s blood pressure as normal when it is actually high. The patient is told they have normal blood pressure and they are sent on their way falsely reassured that all is well. False reassurance can also occur when visiting students are involved in short-term brigades or temporary pop-up clinics. These clinics, often run by outsiders, may only have the ability to check for a few health problems (such as vision problems, dental problems, heart and blood pressure abnormalities). Patients who visit them and go through a limited scope of exams are told everything is normal if no abnormalities are detected. Patients can mis-interpret this ‘clean bill of health’ as being reassuring more broadly and not seek comprehensive evaluation, both preventive and reactive, within local, permanent health systems often better equipped to address a wide array of disease or diseases that fluctuate over time. Thus there are costs resulting from the provision of medical care without mindfulness of quality, professional licensure, and follow-up with patients--- the patients may not seek care in a more appropriate setting, may experience unnecessary pain, and may walk away with false reassurance, among a host of other deleterious results.5. A misunderstanding about what interventions influence the health status of communities and individuals in a sustained fashion.
When undergraduate Global Service-Learning exploration of health is narrowly focused on clinical settings and topics, students do not get an accurate understanding of what determines wellness and disease burden. It is estimated that healthcare (what happens in clinics and hospitals) is about 10% deterministic for whether you have a normal lifespan (Schroeder, 2009). Other factors such as behavioral patterns and social circumstances have a stronger influence on whether an individual lives or dies. Thus, it is important for Global Service-Learning to emphasize determinants of health that reach far beyond clinical walls. This includes social determinants of health, culture, geopolitical realities, and much more. For this reason Child Family Health International’s 25+ Global Health Education Programs focus not only on medical and public health experiential exposure, but also on contextualizing this learning with immersion in the community with host families and integration into existing health systems, as well as home visits, language training, lectures of broad determinants of health, case studies in illness through a biopsychosocial model, and critical reflections on power, culture, and beyond. By focusing beyond the clinic walls, students gain a broader understanding of health and healthcare. To summarize, when Global Service-Learning is done in such a fashion that it is a dis-service the negative impacts include:- Giving students an inaccurate, over-simplified understanding of the causes of and solutions to suboptimal health status in communities at home and abroad.
- Perpetuating disparities and differential treatment of the poor that the Global Service-Learning, Global Health and Health Equity movements set out to understand and address.
- Risking the safety of patients and students.
- Understand how to vet and/or design undergraduate-appropriate health-related Global Service-Learning programs.
- Understand how to engage with students who have misunderstandings or veiled intentions that push ethical and safety boundaries.
- Urge students to consider the underpinnings of sustained gains in health, including health systems strengthening, native healthcare workforce development, economic development, security, stable political systems, and much more.
References
Kung T. (2013). Voices of International Host Communities: Impacts of Global Health Education Programs. Stanford. Schroeder S.A. (2007). We can do it better: Improving the Health of the American people. New England Journal of Medicine. 2007;357:1221-1228.Child Family Health International (CFHI) is a UN-recognized non-profit organization with over 25 Global Health Education Programs in 7 countries. CFHI has been providing Global Service-Learning for over 22 years for students from undergraduate to post-graduate levels and university partners. To find out more visit www.cfhi.org.
Interested in more global-health related resources from globalsl.org? Take a look at:
- Our summary of a piece in the Chronicle of Higher Education, Some Global Health Programs Let Students Do Too Much, Too Soon
- Judith N. Lasker, Distinguished Professor of Sociology at Lehigh University, sharing a summary of her upcoming book on international health volunteerism.
- Dr. Lasker has also been kind enough to share guidelines for international service trip participation, How to Have the Best Possible Global Health Volunteer Trip.