Summary: Several minority groups and students without home plastic surgery programs remain underrepresented in plastic surgery. To address these barriers, our division created the Plastic Surgery Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Mentorship Program and Workshop. Students meeting at least one of the following eligibility criteria were invited in fall of 2020: medical student in years 1 though 3 or a research year who is (1) underrepresented in medicine, including African American, Hispanic/Latinx, Native American, Pacific Islander; (2) lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ); (3) first-generation low-income; or (4) does not have a plastic surgery residency program associated with their medical school. Students participated in quarterly meetings with their resident mentor and the annual hands-on workshop. The workshop was held on March 20, 2020, with both virtual and in-person participants. It included various didactic lectures, a suture laboratory, a resident panel, a social lunch hour, and extremity and head cadaver dissections with fracture plating. Twenty-four students attended the workshop. The course was rated 9.4 of 10 by students. The top met goals were gaining didactic plastic surgery knowledge (100%), exposure to a plastic surgery residency program (100%), resources to help overcome minority-specific barriers (96%), and technical skills such as suturing (96%). At the conclusion of the workshop, students had a significant increase in confidence in various aspects of plastic surgery knowledge and technical skills. The Plastic Surgery Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Mentorship Program and Workshop demonstrated preliminary success in providing support for students underrepresented in medicine and students without home programs.
epression is a leading cause of disability worldwide, interfering with daily activities, quality of life, and function, and sometimes leading to self-harm and suicide. In 2017 alone, more than 264 million people had major depressive disorder worldwide. 1 Major depressive disorder is a result of complicated interactions between psychosocial, genetic, and environmental factors that combine to produce a common constellation of symptoms that include sad or depressed mood, loss of interest, increased fatigue, feelings of guilt, and thoughts of suicide. 2 Many effective treatments for major depressive disorder exist, including psychotherapy and antidepressant medications such as selective-serotonin reuptake inhibitors and tricyclic antidepressants. Despite rapid growth in the number of available treatments for major depressive disorder over the past
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