Journal of general internal medicine
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The call for value-based medicine has augmented the role of primary care physicians, potentially exacerbating the already-acknowledged shortage of primary care physicians in the current delivery landscape. Lifetime earnings for primary care physicians are millions lower than those for other specialties, and the burden of medical school debt is increasing at a rate that outpaces inflation. ⋯ While income-based options exist currently, these are merely a proxy for specialty, and other service-driven options are finite and may impose undue burden on physicians at an early and pressure-laden time in their careers. Value-based repayment reflects the graduate's benefit from physician training while also rewarding the real-time societal value of specialties such as primary care, allowing doctors to put their talents to their best uses while advancing the transformation of the physician workforce necessary to realize value-based, patient-centered, population-oriented care.
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Experiences of discrimination harm mental and physical health, with the strongest penalty on mental health. Among immigrants, it remains unclear how acculturation-the process by which immigrants acquire the beliefs and practices of a host culture-influences the mental health burden of navigating discrimination. On the one hand, acculturation can be associated with upward social mobility. Conversely, the acculturative process may increase exposure to, and recognition of, discrimination. ⋯ While discrimination is associated with poor mental health, a stronger link between discrimination and mental illness exists among younger immigrants and immigrants with increased acculturation. Health practitioners should not overlook the mental health needs of younger immigrants and immigrants who may seem more integrated into US society.