• R I Med J (2013) · Sep 2014

    Teaching and addressing health disparities through the family medicine social and community context of care project.

    • Jordan White, Jessica Heney, Angela Y Esquibel, Camia Dimock, Roberta Goldman, and David Anthony.
    • Assistant Professor of Family Medicine (Clinical), Department of Family Medicine, the Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI; affiliated with Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island, Pawtucket, RI.
    • R I Med J (2013). 2014 Sep 2; 97 (9): 26-30.

    AbstractBy training future physicians to care for patients with backgrounds different from their own, medical schools can help reduce health disparities. To address the need for education in this area, the leaders of the Family Medicine Clerkship at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University developed the Social and Community Context of Care project, required of all medical students rotating through this clerkship. Students develop a hypothetical intervention addressing a health issue seen at their preceptor site, and are assessed on their grasp of the social and contextual issues affecting that health issue in their particular community. Some interventions are actualized in later clerkships or independent study projects; one example, a health class for pregnant and parenting teens at Central Falls High School, is described here. If made a routine part of medical education, projects such as these may help medical students address the health disparities they will encounter in future practice.

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