Asylum medicine is a field that brings together health professionals and human rights advocates to evaluate people seeking protection through the asylum system. Clinicians play a key role by conducting medical and psychological forensic evaluations that help document harm and can strengthen an individual’s legal case. A new Yale-led study, published in BMJ Global Health, introduces a standardized virtual curriculum to train clinicians in performing these forensic medical evaluations (FMEs).
According to Katherine McKenzie, MD, associate professor of medicine (general medicine) at Yale School of Medicine and lead author of this study, there is a shortage of clinicians trained to perform FMEs. “Most of us in asylum medicine are clinicians with full-time jobs—internists, pediatricians, psychiatrists, and social workers—who do this work in our free time,” she says. “While the skills overlap with our clinical training, we still need to be taught how to apply them in a forensic context; we’re not acting as caregivers or advocates but as professionals gathering evidence.”
McKenzie, who directs the Yale Center for Asylum Medicine, worked with other leaders in the field to create the first national curriculum for conducting FMEs that features peer review by experts in medicine, mental health, and human rights. This curriculum is now known as the Asylum Medicine Training Initiative (AMTI).