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1.
Am J Prev Med ; 48(1): 108-15, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25441236

ABSTRACT

The University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center (UNMHSC) adopted a new Vision to work with community partners to help New Mexico make more progress in health and health equity than any other state by 2020. UNMHSC recognized it would be more successful in meeting communities' health priorities if it better aligned its own educational, research, and clinical missions with their needs. National measures that compare states on the basis of health determinants and outcomes were adopted in 2013 as part of Vision 2020 target measures for gauging progress toward improved health and health care in New Mexico. The Vision focused the institution's resources on strengthening community capacity and responding to community priorities via pipeline education, workforce development programs, community-driven and community-focused research, and community-based clinical service innovations, such as telehealth and "health extension." Initiatives with the greatest impact often cut across institutional silos in colleges, departments, and programs, yielding measurable community health benefits. Community leaders also facilitated collaboration by enlisting University of New Mexico educational and clinical resources to better respond to their local priorities. Early progress in New Mexico's health outcomes measures and state health ranking is a promising sign of movement toward Vision 2020.


Subject(s)
Community-Institutional Relations , Health Priorities , Healthy People Programs/organization & administration , Social Determinants of Health , Capacity Building/methods , Capacity Building/organization & administration , Capacity Building/standards , Healthy People Programs/methods , Healthy People Programs/standards , Humans , New Mexico , Organizational Case Studies , Universities
2.
Acad Med ; 85(4): 586-7, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20354371

ABSTRACT

Disappointed by the lack of progress in the advancement of women and underrepresented minority faculty to senior positions and leadership roles in academic medicine and concerned by the prospect that these valuable faculty resources were being lost, a group of five medical school deans agreed to embark on a multiyear project to change the culture of their medical schools for these underrepresented faculty. This commentary outlines the rationale and motivation for the project and sets the stage for future reports from and wider participation in this initiative.


Subject(s)
Academic Medical Centers/ethics , Cultural Competency/education , Education, Medical/methods , Minority Groups/education , Physicians, Women/ethics , Female , Humans , United States
3.
Acad Med ; 82(12): 1152-7, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18046118

ABSTRACT

The University of New Mexico School of Medicine and College of Arts and Sciences developed its combined BA/MD degree program, which will increase the medical school class from 75 students to 100 in the fall of 2010, to address the critical issue of physician shortages in underserved New Mexico. The program, which began operation at the undergraduate (i.e., college) level in 2006, expands opportunities in medical education for New Mexico students, especially those from rural and underserved minority communities, and prepares them to practice in underserved areas of New Mexico. In the BA/MD program, students will earn a bachelor of arts, a medical degree, and a proposed certificate in public health. A challenging liberal arts curriculum introduces the principles of public health. Students have unique rural medicine and public health preceptorship opportunities that begin in the undergraduate years and continue throughout medical school. Students work with a community physician mentor in summer service-learning projects during the undergraduate years, then they return for required rural medicine rotations in the first, third, and fourth years of medical school. Simultaneously, the classroom curriculum for these rural medicine experiences emphasizes the public health perspective. High priority has been placed on supporting students with academic advising and counseling, tutoring, supplemental instruction, on-campus housing, and scholarships. The program has received strong support from communities, the New Mexico state legislature, the New Mexico Medical Society, and the faculties of arts and sciences and the school of medicine. Early results on the undergraduate level demonstrate strong interest from applicants, retention of participants, and enthusiasm of students and faculty alike.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Undergraduate/trends , Education, Premedical/trends , Physicians/supply & distribution , Rural Health Services , Schools, Medical/organization & administration , Curriculum , Humans , Medically Underserved Area , New Mexico , Program Development , School Admission Criteria , Students, Medical/statistics & numerical data , Workforce
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