In response to more interest among students, medical schools are increasing the global health training opportunities available []. However, many of the current strategies to expose medical students to global health are fraught, including an emphasis on transient cultural immersions, suboptimal pre-visit training, and poorly defined student roles for engagement [, ]. Combined, these undermine the student’s learning and any potential benefit to the host institution. The challenges of global health education in high-income country (HIC) medical schools are rooted within long-standing, broader inequities in global health partnerships. Current models provide little understanding of the legacy of colonization in global health initiatives, or of how power imbalances due to colonialism, racism, and epistemic injustice continue to shape inequitable relationships in global health practice and research.

While some students are motivated to pursue global health opportunities because they anticipate a future career in the global arena, it is not uncommon for medical schools to market these opportunities as an honorable vacation, résumé item, or residency application talking point []. Furthermore, some trainees perceive global opportunities, such as pre-med experiences marketed by for-profit companies, as an opportunity to engage in a greater level of clinical work than one would in their home institution, thereby placing patients’ and students’ health at risk []. As highlighted in Lasker et al., these short-term engagements create a false sense of normalcy with dangerous implications []. However, more meaningful engagement during medical training is hindered by students’ inability to take extended absences, difficulty securing funding, inadequate preparation for these experiences, and a paucity of mentors with demonstrated commitment to equitable global health partnerships [].

Colonization in global health refers to the enduring legacy of colonial structures and power differentials that drive discrimination and allow for disproportionate benefits to individuals at HIC institutions at the expense of their low- and middle-income country (LMIC) partners []. Costs to the host institutions can include a distraction from the institution’s priorities, increased use of physical resources, stretched responsibility to provide oversight to new students, and a lack of reciprocal opportunities [, ]. Calls for decolonizing the field of global health have been amplified over the last few years, and US medical schools must seize the opportunity to train decolonizers – students who understand the complicated framework and history of global inequities and seek action-oriented paths that work in the best interest of the communities they wish to impact.

As a group of senior medical school students who have committed to integrating global health into our long-term career plans, we have supplemented our own education with the goal of decolonizing our approach to global health engagement. We believe students in medical education should pursue their interests in health equity in global spaces to their fullest potential, and at the same time, we recognize our risk of perpetuating colonial ideas despite our good intentions. From our experiences, we outline steps that can be adopted by US medical schools to shift their global health education approach to develop practitioners better prepared to contribute equitably.

First, medical students should be exposed to more global health courses, including the history of colonial medicine and its effects on specific local contexts. These courses should be supplemented with training in global health ethics, health equity, cultural sensitivity, and building partnerships, such as the recommended strategies for developing partnerships that are sustainable, ethical, and beneficial to host communities outlined in the Brocher Declaration []. Courses rooted in these concepts may mitigate romanticized notions medical students have regarding global health, such as “fixing” a country’s problems. These courses also create space for students to challenge their standards in health equity, critically reflect on their motivation to enter global health, recognize their benefits from participating, and consider their impact – both positive and negative – in any global health exchanges. These competencies will be foundational for those who go on to pursue careers at the intersection of global health and medicine.

Medical schools should also deemphasize short-term, unidirectional engagement. Extended experiences should be encouraged, such as gap years in which students participate in global health fellowships. Such prolonged commitments demonstrate a willingness to center the cause above one’s individual professional advancement. Through established long-term partnerships at the institutional level, short-term exchanges at international sites can remain an important part of global health opportunities in medical schools. Continuity must be coordinated for effective student-to-student handoff. All international experiences should be linked to the host institution’s priorities, must have defined roles clarified with pre-visit contracts co-developed with the host institution, and have close supervision.

For any type of exchange, medical schools must provide pre-visit training that includes site-specific orientation and strategies for effective collaboration to ensure that students are sufficiently prepared. Importantly, medical schools must have strong oversight to ensure students who travel to international sites do not practice medicine above their level of training. Students interested in global health should be encouraged to connect with faculty and identify a project early in their training, and should stay engaged in those projects for the full tenure of their medical school training, even when not physically present at the international sites.

Medical schools must recruit faculty committed to developing equitable, long-term collaborations with global health partners, and the institution’s faculty promotion criteria must be aligned so as to encourage this work []. These faculty are the custodians of partnerships where power dynamics can be broken down to allow for bi-directional student visitation, dedicated research funding streams, and ongoing needs assessments to ensure visiting students do not strain local resources. Importantly, these faculty members are also essential in helping to build the medical student’s research capacity grounded in contextual understanding. Medical schools can also promote decolonization in global health research by requiring faculty to involve partner organizations in all aspects of international research, achieve equity in collaboration such as sharing key resources and fair authorship practices, and link research to advocacy. Lastly, medical schools should establish institutional task forces that hold students and faculty accountable in centering equity in all global health endeavors.

We aspire to promote a generation of socially conscious physicians better prepared to care for an increasingly diverse global citizenry, no matter where they practice in the world. Decolonizing global health will not occur overnight. US medical schools can foster an understanding and commitment to this lifelong practice, exposing students to global health work as a long-term pursuit that centers on equity in clinical work and research.