This study offers a detailed analysis of how disability and English as a Second Language (ESL) competencies are incorporated into undergraduate medical curricula. Using systematic curriculum mapping at a rural LCME-accredited medical school, the research quantifies the hours dedicated to these areas-approximately 202 hours for disability-related topics and 177 hours for ESL-distributed across all four years. The curriculum emphasizes foundational knowledge in social determinants of health, cultural humility, communication strategies, and health disparities, with increasing clinical application throughout training. Early stages focus on core concepts, such as understanding disability definitions and culturally sensitive communication, which are reinforced during clinical rotations involving rural health, pediatrics, and internal medicine. The curriculum aims to develop skills gradually, culminating in leadership and advocacy roles by the final year. The analysis highlights the importance of longitudinal reinforcement and integration to ensure sustained competency development and effective application in clinical settings. Despite the comprehensive overview, the study's limitations include its focus on a single institution and reliance on quantitative data, without assessing actual student competency or exploring extracurricular learning experiences. The findings underscore that a developmental, interconnected approach-combining knowledge, skills, and application-is essential to prepare physicians to deliver equitable, culturally competent care to diverse populations. Such curriculum design can help address health disparities, improve patient outcomes, and promote health equity. The study advocates for ongoing curriculum refinement that emphasizes continuous reinforcement and integration of disability and ESL-related competencies throughout medical training, ensuring future clinicians are equipped to meet the needs of increasingly diverse patient populations.
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Cottrell et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/699010942ccff479cfe56f2f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2026.2627020
Lesley Cottrell
West Virginia University
Scott Cottrell
Isabela Negrin
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
Medical Education Online
West Virginia University
Association of University Centers on Disabilities
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