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1.
J Gen Intern Med ; 25 Suppl 2: S136-9, 2010 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20352508

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Medical-legal partnerships (MLPs) bring together medical professionals and lawyers to address social causes of health disparities, including access to adequate food, housing and income. SETTING: Eighty-one MLPs offer legal services for patients whose basic needs are not being met. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: Besides providing legal help to patients and working on policy advocacy, MLPs educate residents (29 residency programs), health care providers (160 clinics and hospitals) and medical students (25 medical schools) about how social conditions affect health and screening for unmet basic needs, and how these needs can often be impacted by enforcing federal and state laws. These curricula include medical school courses, noon conferences, advocacy electives and CME courses. PROGRAM EVALUATION: Four example programs are described in this paper. Established MLPs have changed knowledge (MLP | Boston-97% reported screening for two unmet needs), attitudes (Stanford reported reduced concern about making patients "nervous" with legal questions from 38% to 21%) and behavior (NY LegalHealth reported increasing resident referrals from 15% to 54%) after trainings. One developing MLP found doctors experienced difficulty addressing social issues (NJ LAMP-67% of residents felt uncomfortable). DISCUSSION: MLPs train residents, students and other health care providers to tackle socially caused health disparities.


Subject(s)
Cooperative Behavior , Healthcare Disparities , Lawyers , Legislation, Medical , Physicians , Healthcare Disparities/methods , Healthcare Disparities/standards , Humans , Lawyers/education , Lawyers/standards , Legislation, Medical/standards , Physicians/standards , Program Evaluation/methods , Program Evaluation/standards
2.
J Grad Med Educ ; 1(2): 304-9, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21975996

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Many low- and moderate-income individuals and families have at least one unmet legal need (for example, unsafe housing conditions, lack of access to food and/or income support, lack of access to health care), which, if left unaddressed, can have harmful consequences on health. Eighty unique medical-legal partnership programs, serving over 180 clinics and hospitals nationwide, seek to combine the strengths of medical and legal professionals to address patients' legal needs before they become crises. Each partnership is adapted to serve the specific needs of its own patient base. INTERVENTION: This article describes innovative, residency-based medical-legal partnership educational experiences in pediatrics, internal medicine, and family medicine at 3 different sites (Boston, Massachusetts; Newark, New Jersey; and Tucson, Arizona). This article addresses how these 3 programs have been designed to meet the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education's 6 competencies, along with suggested methods for evaluating the effectiveness of these programs. Training is a core component of medical-legal partnership, and most medical-legal partnerships have developed curricula for resident education in a variety of formats, including noon conferences, grand rounds, poverty simulations and day-long special sessions. DISCUSSION: Medical-legal partnerships combine the skill sets of medical professionals and lawyers to teach social determinants of health by training residents and attending physicians to identify and help address unmet legal needs. Medical-legal partnership doctors and lawyers treat health disparities and improve patient health and well-being by ensuring that public programs, regulations, and laws created to benefit health and improve access to health care are implemented and enforced.

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