Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges
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The application process for fellowships in internal medicine subspecialties begins approximately 18 to 24 months before the start of training, requiring residents to decide on a career by the beginning of their second year of residency. The authors surveyed the internal medicine residents at Mount Sinai Hospital to assess their attitudes toward the fellowship application process. ⋯ As the current system of applying for medical fellowships is generally experienced negatively by residents, the authors recommend that the process be moved to the middle of the third year and that medical schools, residency programs, and fellowship training programs reconsider the entire fellowship application process.
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The education of students in medicine, nursing, pharmacy, and dentistry in the seven health professions schools of the University System of West Virginia has undergone remarkable changes since 1991 to become more responsive to community needs. The changes have also enabled the schools to remain in sync with other anticipated changes in health care delivery. A primary care, community-based academic system has been developed, and students, campus-based faculty, community-based field professors, and lay community members collaborate to identify and resolve problems important to the communities located in the 42 counties designated Under-served Health Professions Service areas, and five additional rural counties. ⋯ The five-years demonstration project that began the new system started in 1991 with four rural sites. By 1996, the system had expanded greatly and consisted of 13 consortia of communities with a total of over 100 rural primary care centers plus several small rural hospitals, public health departments, and other health and social services agencies. The 1996 West Virginia legislature approved funds for the higher education budget that will support and sustain this primary care, community-based academic system.