| Literature DB >> 24876120 |
Li-Li Hsiao1, Jingshing Wu2, Albert C Yeh3, Eric C Shieh4, Cheryl Cui5, Ang Li6, Laura C Polding7, Rayhnuma Ahmed7, Kenneth Lim8, Tzong-Shi Lu9, Connie M Rhee10, Joseph V Bonventre11.
Abstract
Despite the increasing prevalence of CKD in the United States, there is a declining interest among United States medical graduates in nephrology as a career choice. Effective programs are needed to generate interest at early educational stages when career choices can be influenced. The Kidney Disease Screening and Awareness Program (KDSAP) is a novel program initiated at Harvard College that increases student knowledge of and interest in kidney health and disease, interest in nephrology career paths, and participation in kidney disease research. This model, built on physician mentoring, kidney screening of underserved populations, direct interactions with kidney patients, and opportunities to participate in kidney research, can be reproduced and translated to other workforce-challenged subspecialties.Entities:
Keywords: educational model; health screening; mentoring; nephrology workforce; premedical training; service learning
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24876120 PMCID: PMC4147978 DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2013090928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Soc Nephrol ISSN: 1046-6673 Impact factor: 10.121