Louisville Medicine Volume 62, Issue 9 | Page 16

(continued from page 12) “The university has been a national leader in creating an inclusive campus environment for LGBT people, and the eQuality initiative is an exciting next step. We will be preparing the very best health care professionals and sending them out to an LGBT community that desperately needs them,” said Brian Buford, Assistant Provost for Diversity and Director of the LGBT Center at U of L. “It is a privilege to develop this curriculum for our medical students. It is critical for our students to be competent and compassionate in the delivery of care to the LGBT community,” said M. Ann Shaw, MD, MA, Senior Associate Dean for Medical Education at the U of L School of Medicine. “Patient fears about judgment, discrimination, or lack of acceptance in the health care setting fuels many of the health disparities we see across our health care system,” says Amy Holthouser, MD, Assistant Dean for Undergraduate Medical Education at the U of L School of Medicine. “Preventive measures often fail because patients who have had a previous negative experience are much more reluctant to follow up for recommended preventive care or seek help early in an illness, perpetuating the cycle of health disparity. We are seeking to break the cycle by ensuring all graduates have the tools to create the welcoming and affirmative environment that all patients deserve from a competent physician.” This project is building on the great success of The University of Louisville LGBT Health and Wellness Competency Certificate Program. The program consists of six inter-professional sessions of Medical, Dental, Nursing, and Public Health students and includes LGBT health topics such as: 1) Culturally Competent Care for LGBT Patients; 2) Health Promotion and Disease Prevention; 3) Taking an Inclusive History/Risk Reduction Counseling; 4) Understanding the T in LGBT; 5) LGBT Mental Health; and 6) HIV Epidemiology. The inaugural year of the program confirmed strong student interest, with a total of 250 students from the health sciences schools attending at least one session and an average of 70 in each session. U of L will spend the next several months developing the formal curriculum and will begin the pilot program in the 2015-16 academic year, with full implementation into the curriculum in 2016-17. The UME office is assembling an eQuality advisory team of local experts in LGBT and DSD patient care and curriculum David Wiegman, PhD, Professor of Physiology, Stacie Steinbock, M. Ed, School of Medicine Dean Toni Ganzel, MD, MBA and Brian Buford, M. Ed., attend the HSC Pride Cookout. development to lead efforts: Amy Holthouser, MD (Med-Peds), Veronnie Faye Jones, MD, PhD (Pediatrics), Suzanne Kingery, MD (Pediatric Endocrinology), Karen Krigger, MD (Family Medicine), Leslee Martin, MA (UME Curriculum Development/Evaluation), Susan Sawning, MSSW (Social Work/UME Research), M. Ann Shaw, MD, MA (Internal Medicine), Clayton Smith, MD (Internal Medicine), Stacie Steinbock, M.Ed. (Human Sexuality), and Kari Zahorik, MD (Family Medicine/Campus Health). Specific curriculum examples might involve: taking a DSD-Affected patient inclusive sexual history, mental health and the LGBT adolescent patient, and a standardized patient case involving end-of-life decision-making for a same-sex couple. “The new LGBT curriculum will not only help us medical students to be better doctors, but the entire community will surely benefit from the compassionate spirit and inclusive philosophy behind this education,” said Marlowe Dieckmann, a second year medical student. “We will soon be able to give a better level of care to this historically neglected patient population. It is very exciting to be part of a medical school that is leading the way in LGBT education. I am thankful that our administration, faculty, staff and students had the vision and the courage to advocate for the LGBT curriculum. I am proud to be a medical student here.” It is our goal that the entire community will benefit from eQuality. The city of Louisville has a large LGBT population but no LGBT community center; therefore, the LGBT Center at U of L is often the first point of contact for LGBT people seeking health care resources. Much of its success is tied to a strong community partnership that created Feast on Equality three years ago, a signature dinner event that raises funds for the center. The one-of-a-kind event was born out of the vision of founder Tommy Arnold, who heard that there were LGBT students who were not welcome home during the holidays because of their identity. Moved to action, he started hosting an annual Thanksgiving dinner to serve those displaced students Left to right: Dr. Jyme Charette, Prosthedontic Resident at the University of Louisville School of Dentistry, Stacie Steinbock, Director, LGBT Center Satellite Office on the Health Sciences Center Campus, Dr. James Ramsey, President, and Brian Buford, Assistant Provost for Diversity and Director of the LGBT Center at UofL. 14 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE