Public and Population Health in U.S. Medical Education: A Review of Guidance in Extraordinary Times
- PMID: 36917116
- DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000005208
Public and Population Health in U.S. Medical Education: A Review of Guidance in Extraordinary Times
Abstract
Generations of medical educators have recommended including public and population health (PPH) content in the training of U.S. physicians. The COVID-19 pandemic, structural racism, epidemic gun violence, and the existential threats caused by climate change are currently unsubtle reminders of the essential nature of PPH in medical education and practice. To assess the state of PPH content in medical education, the authors reviewed relevant guidance, including policies, standards, and recommendations from national bodies that represent and oversee medical education for physicians with MD degrees.Findings confirm that guidance across the medical education continuum, from premedical education to continuing professional development, increasingly includes PPH elements that vary in specificity and breadth. Graduate medical education policies present the most comprehensive approach in both primary care and subspecialty fields. Behavioral, quantitative, social, and systems sciences are represented, although not uniformly, in guidance for every phase of training. Quantitative PPH skills are frequently presented in the context of research, but not in relation to the development of population health perspectives (e.g., evidence-based medicine, quality improvement, policy development). The interdependence between governmental public health and medical practice, environmental health, and the impact of structural racism and other systems of oppression on health are urgent concerns, yet are not consistently or explicitly included in curricular guidance. To prepare physicians to meet the health needs of patients and communities, educators should identify and address gaps and inconsistencies in PPH curricula and related guidance.Re-examinations of public health and health care systems in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic support the importance of PPH in physician training and practice, as physicians can help to bridge clinical and public health systems. This review provides an inventory of existing guidance (presented in the appendices) to assist educators in establishing PPH as an essential foundation of physician training and practice.
Copyright © 2023 the Association of American Medical Colleges.
Comment in
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Integrating Public and Population Health Into Medical Education Curricula: Opportunities and Challenges for Reform.Acad Med. 2023 Dec 1;98(12):1348-1350. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000005469. Epub 2023 Oct 6. Acad Med. 2023. PMID: 37801585
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- Liaison Committee on Medical Education. Functions and Structure of a Medical School: Standards for Accreditation of Medical Education Programs Leading to the M.D. Degree. https://med.fsu.edu/sites/default/files/userFiles/file/FacultyDevelopmen... . Published June 2008. Accessed February 21, 2023.
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- State of Rhode Island Department of Health. Physicians (Licensing). https://health.ri.gov/licenses/detail.php?id=200 . Accessed February 21, 2023.
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