ChangeMedEd Initiative

Equity, diversity and belonging in medical education

UPDATED . 4 MIN READ

The primary role of medical education is to produce a competent health care workforce capable of meeting the health care needs of our population. Therefore, the central goal of our health care workforce must be the elimination of health inequity.

The health care workforce as historically and conventionally conceived has not accomplished this goal, and in many ways has contributed to and compounded the problems. The effort to develop a workforce capable of addressing health inequity will produce a number of outcomes. Increased diversity and an improved sense of belonging will be among the most notable. This is the perspective that informs the work to which our team is dedicated. Specific examples are outlined below.

Recently leading health care and medical associations from across the country made a statement in support of DEI policies in health care, as a means to help improve the health of our nation.

In 2023 the U.S. Supreme Court announced a ruling that restricts medical schools from considering race and ethnicity among the multiple factors in admissions policies.

The AMA recently adopted a policy on race-conscious admissions in higher education and has produced several resources and commentaries on affirmative action in medical education. The following is a selection of materials related to the ruling and diversity in medical education.

Policy

Press release 

AMA news  

Faculty development CME

"Doctor” derives from the Latin word for “teacher.” Teach yourself to best enhance your effectiveness as an educator to patients, students and teams.

Videos 

In 2021 the AMA Council on Medical Education issued a resolution requesting that the “AMA work with appropriate stakeholders to commission and enact the recommendations of a forward-looking, cross-continuum, external study of 21st century medical education focused on reimagining the future of health equity and racial justice in medical education, improving the diversity of the health workforce, and ameliorating inequitable outcomes among minoritized and marginalized patient populations.”

This work is underway and is being conducted by a cross-disciplinary editorial panel with broad expertise and experience in medical education.

MedEd’s horizon: Just, merciful, diverse and equitable is a new compendium of abstracts submitted to the AMA externally commissioned study on equity in medical education. This publication is available for download from the AMA website at no cost (registration required).

These abstracts focus on reimagining the future of health equity and racial justice in medical education; improving the diversity of the health workforce; and ameliorating inequitable outcomes among minoritized and marginalized patient populations. Over 150 groups of authors responded to the call for submissions.

Administered by the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine with support from the AMA, the Resident Diversity Leadership Program (RDLP) is a cohort-based leadership program for residents from backgrounds underrepresented in medicine. The program engages residents in a leadership curriculum, provides the opportunity for the participants to meet and engage with leaders in academic medicine with similar backgrounds, and helps them lead diversity, equity, and inclusion projects at their home institutions.

Current participants are in residency programs at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Ohio State University College of Medicine and Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine.

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