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Reframing undergraduate medical education in global health: Rationale and key principles from the Bellagio Global Health Education Initiative
- Peluso, Michael J;
- van Schalkwyk, Susan;
- Kellett, Anne;
- Brewer, Timothy F;
- Clarfield, A Mark;
- Davies, David;
- Garg, Bishan;
- Greensweig, Tobin;
- Hafler, Janet;
- Hou, Jianlin;
- Maley, Moira;
- Mayanja-Kizza, Harriet;
- Pemba, Senga;
- Samaan, Janette Jenny;
- Schoenbaum, Stephen;
- Sethia, Babulal;
- Uribe, Juan Pablo;
- Margolis, Carmi Z;
- Rohrbaugh, Robert M
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1080/0142159x.2017.1301654Abstract
Global health education (GHE) continues to be a growing initiative in many medical schools across the world. This focus is no longer limited to participants from high-income countries and has expanded to institutions and students from low- and middle-income settings. With this shift has come a need to develop meaningful curricula through engagement between educators and learners who represent the sending institutions and the diverse settings in which GHE takes place. The Bellagio Global Health Education Initiative (BGHEI) was founded to create a space for such debate and discussion and to generate guidelines towards a universal curriculum for global health. In this article, we describe the development and process of our work and outline six overarching principles that ought to be considered when adopting an inclusive approach to GHE curriculum development.
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