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Health disparities and underserved populations: a potential solution, medical school partnerships with free clinics to improve curriculum
Health-care educators share the social responsibility to teach medical students about social determinants of health and health-care disparities and subsequently to encourage medical students to pursue residencies in primary care and medical practice in underserved communities. Free clinics provide c...
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Published in: | Medical education online 2015-01, Vol.20 (1), p.27535 |
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container_title | Medical education online |
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creator | VanderWielen, Lynn M Vanderbilt, Allison A Crossman, Steven H Mayer, Sallie D Enurah, Alexander S Gordon, Samuel S Bradner, Melissa K |
description | Health-care educators share the social responsibility to teach medical students about social determinants of health and health-care disparities and subsequently to encourage medical students to pursue residencies in primary care and medical practice in underserved communities. Free clinics provide care to underserved communities, yet collaborative partnerships with such organizations remain largely untapped by medical schools. Free clinics and medical schools in 10 US states demonstrate that such partnerships are geographically feasible and have the potential to mutually benefit both organizational types. As supported by prior research, students exposed to underserved populations may be more likely to pursue primary care fields and practice in underserved communities, improving health-care infrastructure. |
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ispartof | Medical education online, 2015-01, Vol.20 (1), p.27535 |
issn | 1087-2981 |
language | eng |
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source | Open Access: PubMed Central; Taylor & Francis Open Access; Social Science Premium Collection; Sociology Collection; ProQuest - Publicly Available Content Database |
title | Health disparities and underserved populations: a potential solution, medical school partnerships with free clinics to improve curriculum |
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