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MedEdPublish (2016) ; 7: 133, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38074569

ABSTRACT

This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. Few longitudinal integrated clerkships (LICs) have increased the proportion of students who choose to go into primary care or work with underserved populations. A mixed-methods questionnaire was developed and sent to alumni (2006-2016) of the Interclerkship Ambulatory Care Tract (InterACT), a third-year clerkship in which students apply evidence-based medicine and chronic care model principles to outpatient longitudinal care. A likert scale was utilized for quantitative questions. Descriptive and thematic analyses were performed on the qualitative responses using a constant comparative approach. A majority (80%; 49/61) responded. Of the 44 physicians who responded to questions about current specialty, 75% indicated pediatrics, family medicine, or internal medicine. The majority of respondents (89%) reported that they care for patients considered to be medically underserved. Alumni overwhelmingly felt that the clerkship impacted the following: their specialty choice (71%, 34/48), and the population of patients they chose to take care of (80%, 39/49). The following attributes emerged from the qualitative questions as key determinants of future decisions regarding specialty and patient population: holistic patient care, strong mentorship, longitudinal patient relationships, and care of the homebound. These key attributes, if implemented in other LICs, may be a means to increase the number of medical students that choose to work in primary care fields and/or with underserved populations.

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