• Family medicine · Jul 2021

    Social Accountability and Graduate Medical Education.

    • Arthur Kaufman, Mary Alice Scott, John Andazola, Danielle Fitzsimmons-Pattison, and Laura Parajón.
    • University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM.
    • Fam Med. 2021 Jul 7; 53 (7): 632-637.

    AbstractBecause graduate medical education (GME) is largely publicly funded, it should be judged on how well it addresses the public's health needs. However, the current system distributes GME resources inequitably by specialty and geography, and neglects to focus on training physicians adequately in the care of populations while reducing health disparities. Instead, GME continues to concentrate training in hospital-based academic centers and in subspecialties, which often exacerbates disparities in health outcomes and access to care. GME can be more socially accountable by shifting incentive structures to support primary care, creating more equitable distribution of residency slots and funding, and promoting training programs that focus on social and structural determinants of health.

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