Literature DB >> 24128617

Academic medicine: a key partner in strengthening the primary care infrastructure via teaching health centers.

Richard E Rieselbach1, Byron J Crouse, Katherine Neuhausen, Thomas J Nasca, John G Frohna.   

Abstract

In the United States, a worsening shortage of primary care physicians, along with structural deficiencies in their training, threaten the primary care system that is essential to ensuring access to high-quality, cost-effective health care. Community health centers (CHCs) are an underused resource that could facilitate rapid expansion of the primary care workforce and simultaneously prepare trainees for 21st-century practice. The Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education (THCGME) program, currently funded by the Affordable Care Act, uses CHCs as training sites for primary-care-focused graduate medical education (GME).The authors propose that the goals of the THCGME program could be amplified by fostering partnerships between CHCs and teaching hospitals (academic medical centers [AMCs]). AMCs would encourage their primary care residency programs to expand by establishing teaching health center (THC) tracks. Modifications to the current THCGME model, facilitated by formal CHC and academic medicine partnerships (CHAMPs), would address the primary care physician shortage, produce physicians prepared for 21st-century practice, expose trainees to interprofessional education in a multidisciplinary environment, and facilitate the rapid expansion of CHC capacity.To succeed, CHAMP THCs require a comprehensive consortium agreement designed to ensure equity between the community and academic partners; conforming with this agreement will provide the high-quality GME necessary to ensure residency accreditation. CHAMP THCs also require a federal mechanism to ensure stable, long-term funding. CHAMP THCs would develop in select CHCs that desire a partnership with AMCs and have capacity for providing a community-based setting for both GME and health services research.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24128617     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000035

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  4 in total

1.  States Can Transform Their Health Care Workforce.

Authors:  Paul H Rockey; Richard E Rieselbach; Katherine Neuhausen; Thomas J Nasca; Robert L Phillips; David N Sundwall; Ingrid Philibert; Nicholas A Yaghmour
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2014-12

2.  Teaching Health Centers Can Meet Objectives for State Medicaid Innovation.

Authors:  Richard E Rieselbach; Ted Epperly; Gregory Nycz; Paul Rockey
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2018-06

3.  Rural primary care physician workforce expansion: an opportunity for bipartisan legislation.

Authors:  Richard E Rieselbach; Robert L Phillips; Thomas J Nasca; Byron J Crouse
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2013-12

4.  Ambulatory training for primary care general internists: innovation with the affordable care act in mind.

Authors:  Richard E Rieselbach; David A Feldstein; Patrick T Lee; Thomas J Nasca; Paul H Rockey; Alwin F Steinmann; Valerie E Stone
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2014-06
  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.