| Literature DB >> 1811814 |
D L Harris1, F Mullan, C E Simpson, R G Harmon.
Abstract
Little progress has been made in increasing the number of minority faculty members at US medical schools. From 1975 through 1989, underrepresented minority medical faculty increased only 0.3%--from 2.7% to 3.0%. In the field of medicine in general, only 3% of physicians are African-American and 3% are Hispanic, while the African-American and Hispanic populations are approximately 12% and 7%, respectively, of the total US population. A number of factors have caused the persistent underrepresentation of minority health professions trainees: inadequate or inappropriate career counseling, admissions policies, relatively high attrition rates after matriculation, substantial costs of education, and lack of appropriate mentors and role models. Helping minority students overcome these obstacles requires providing them with appropriate information, preparation, motivation, and opportunities at all stages of the educational process. Attention must focus on recruiting minority students into the scientific, academic professions if an increase is to occur in numbers of underrepresented minorities in all specialties of medicine. The Health Resources and Services Administration and private foundations have committed to providing funds to educational institutions to help encourage minority students to pursue academic careers. Leadership at these institutions must also commit to increasing the numbers of underrepresented minority faculty and senior administrators.Mesh:
Year: 1991 PMID: 1811814
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Assoc Acad Minor Phys ISSN: 1048-9886