Literature DB >> 8311894

Social responsibility and the academic medical center: building community-based systems for the nation's health.

S Foreman1.   

Abstract

Academic medical centers have fulfilled several of their missions with immense success but have failed to fulfill others. They have responded only modestly to the needs of the nation's underserved rural and urban communities. The author calls on academic medical centers to take an aggressively active role in building the medical infrastructure now missing in these communities and outlines a multi-part agenda for institutional commitment. It includes developing community-based systems of primary care, outreach programs, and social supports; training professionals committed to serving isolated and poor communities; and performing research that will extend the knowledge base to include the health and social issues of the disadvantaged. (Examples are given of institutions that have pioneered these kinds of community-based activities.) To build the new infrastructure, financing must be secured (various sources are discussed), a community-based faculty must be developed, and each institution's leadership--the medical school dean, the hospital executive, and the department chairmen--must come together around a new agenda and support it materially and psychologically, making whatever changes are needed in the corporate culture. The author warns that if centers do not undertake this responsibility for the health of the underserved, a critical job will go undone, a huge opportunity will have been missed, and American society will be the poorer.

Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 8311894     DOI: 10.1097/00001888-199402000-00002

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


  8 in total

1.  What do they contribute? Family medicine residents who practise in cities.

Authors:  Joanna Bates; Rodney Andrew
Journal:  Can Fam Physician       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 3.275

2.  When worlds intersect: practical and ethical challenges when caring for international patients in the NICU.

Authors:  T Langer; C L Cummings; E C Meyer
Journal:  J Perinatol       Date:  2015-12       Impact factor: 2.521

Review 3.  Shaping the future of academic health centers: the potential contributions of departments of family medicine.

Authors:  Warren P Newton; C Annette DuBard
Journal:  Ann Fam Med       Date:  2006 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 5.166

Review 4.  Recent and emerging trends in undergraduate medical education. Curricular responses to a rapidly changing health care system.

Authors:  S D Seifer
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1998-05

5.  Toward phase 4 trials in heart failure: A social and corporate responsibility of the medical profession.

Authors:  Pupalan Iyngkaran; Glen S Beneby
Journal:  World J Methodol       Date:  2015-12-26

6.  Faculty beliefs, perceptions, and level of community involvement in their research: a survey at one urban academic institution.

Authors:  Clara Goldberg-Freeman; Nancy Kass; Andrea Gielen; Patricia Tracey; Barbara Bates-Hopkins; Mark Farfel
Journal:  J Empir Res Hum Res Ethics       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 1.742

7.  Fly-By medical care: Conceptualizing the global and local social responsibilities of medical tourists and physician voluntourists.

Authors:  Jeremy Snyder; Shafik Dharamsi; Valorie A Crooks
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2011-04-06       Impact factor: 4.185

8.  The urban safety net: can it keep people healthy and out of the hospital?

Authors:  Thomas P O'Toole; Jose Arbelaez; Christine Haggerty
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2004-06       Impact factor: 3.671

  8 in total

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