Impact of game jam learning about cultural safety in Colombian medical education: a randomised controlled trial

Abstract Background Cultural safety, whereby health professionals respect and promote the cultural identity of patients, could reduce intercultural tensions that hinder patient access to effective health services in Colombia. Game jams are participatory events to create educational games, a potentia...

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Main Authors: Juan Pimentel, Anne Cockcroft, Neil Andersson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02545-7
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spelling doaj-7b084a13eb1240b1b46402d70489d6fe2021-03-11T11:26:24ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202021-02-0121111210.1186/s12909-021-02545-7Impact of game jam learning about cultural safety in Colombian medical education: a randomised controlled trialJuan Pimentel0Anne Cockcroft1Neil Andersson2CIET-PRAM, Department of Family Medicine, McGill UniversityCIET-PRAM, Department of Family Medicine, McGill UniversityCIET-PRAM, Department of Family Medicine, McGill UniversityAbstract Background Cultural safety, whereby health professionals respect and promote the cultural identity of patients, could reduce intercultural tensions that hinder patient access to effective health services in Colombia. Game jams are participatory events to create educational games, a potentially engaging learning environment for Millennial medical students. We set out to determine whether medical student participation in a game jam on cultural safety is more effective than more conventional education in changing self-reported intended patient-oriented behavior and confidence in transcultural skills. Methods We conducted a parallel-group, two-arm randomized controlled trial with 1:1 allocation. Colombian medical students and medical interns at University of La Sabana participated in the trial. The intervention was a game jam to create an educational game on cultural safety, and the reference was a standard lesson plus an interactive workshop on cultural safety. Both sessions lasted eight hours. Stratified randomization allocated the participants to the intervention and control groups, with masked allocation until commencement. Results 531 students completed the baseline survey, 347 completed the survey immediately after the intervention, and 336 completed the survey after 6 months. After the intervention, game jam participants did not have better intentions of culturally safe behaviour than did participants in the reference group (difference in means: 0.08 95% CI − 0.05 to 0.23); both groups had an improvement in this outcome. Multivariate analysis adjusted by clusters confirmed that game jam learning was associated with higher transcultural self-efficacy immediately after the intervention (wt OR 2.03 cl adj 95% CI 1.25–3.30). Conclusions Game jam learning improved cultural safety intentions of Colombian medical students to a similar degree as did a carefully designed lecture and interactive workshop. The game jam was also associated with positive change in participant transcultural self-efficacy. We encourage further research to explore the impact of cultural safety training on patient-related outcomes. Our experience could inform initiatives to introduce cultural safety training in other multicultural settings. Trial registration Registered on ISRCTN registry on July 18th 2019. Registration number: ISRCTN14261595 .https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02545-7Game jamSerious gamesCo-designCultural safetyMedical educationColombia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan Pimentel
Anne Cockcroft
Neil Andersson
spellingShingle Juan Pimentel
Anne Cockcroft
Neil Andersson
Impact of game jam learning about cultural safety in Colombian medical education: a randomised controlled trial
BMC Medical Education
Game jam
Serious games
Co-design
Cultural safety
Medical education
Colombia
author_facet Juan Pimentel
Anne Cockcroft
Neil Andersson
author_sort Juan Pimentel
title Impact of game jam learning about cultural safety in Colombian medical education: a randomised controlled trial
title_short Impact of game jam learning about cultural safety in Colombian medical education: a randomised controlled trial
title_full Impact of game jam learning about cultural safety in Colombian medical education: a randomised controlled trial
title_fullStr Impact of game jam learning about cultural safety in Colombian medical education: a randomised controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Impact of game jam learning about cultural safety in Colombian medical education: a randomised controlled trial
title_sort impact of game jam learning about cultural safety in colombian medical education: a randomised controlled trial
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Cultural safety, whereby health professionals respect and promote the cultural identity of patients, could reduce intercultural tensions that hinder patient access to effective health services in Colombia. Game jams are participatory events to create educational games, a potentially engaging learning environment for Millennial medical students. We set out to determine whether medical student participation in a game jam on cultural safety is more effective than more conventional education in changing self-reported intended patient-oriented behavior and confidence in transcultural skills. Methods We conducted a parallel-group, two-arm randomized controlled trial with 1:1 allocation. Colombian medical students and medical interns at University of La Sabana participated in the trial. The intervention was a game jam to create an educational game on cultural safety, and the reference was a standard lesson plus an interactive workshop on cultural safety. Both sessions lasted eight hours. Stratified randomization allocated the participants to the intervention and control groups, with masked allocation until commencement. Results 531 students completed the baseline survey, 347 completed the survey immediately after the intervention, and 336 completed the survey after 6 months. After the intervention, game jam participants did not have better intentions of culturally safe behaviour than did participants in the reference group (difference in means: 0.08 95% CI − 0.05 to 0.23); both groups had an improvement in this outcome. Multivariate analysis adjusted by clusters confirmed that game jam learning was associated with higher transcultural self-efficacy immediately after the intervention (wt OR 2.03 cl adj 95% CI 1.25–3.30). Conclusions Game jam learning improved cultural safety intentions of Colombian medical students to a similar degree as did a carefully designed lecture and interactive workshop. The game jam was also associated with positive change in participant transcultural self-efficacy. We encourage further research to explore the impact of cultural safety training on patient-related outcomes. Our experience could inform initiatives to introduce cultural safety training in other multicultural settings. Trial registration Registered on ISRCTN registry on July 18th 2019. Registration number: ISRCTN14261595 .
topic Game jam
Serious games
Co-design
Cultural safety
Medical education
Colombia
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02545-7
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