UNMC Primary Care Day to Educate Medical Students About Need for Primary Care Physicians

University of Nebraska Medical Center medical students will

host National Primary Care Day Thursday, Oct. 2, from 10 a.m. to

3 p.m. The purpose of the fourth annual event is to educate

first- and second-year UNMC medical students on the fields of

primary care and encourage students to choose primary care as a

practice.

Primary care includes family medicine, pediatrics,

obstetrics/gynecology and internal medicine. The primary care

physician, commonly called a generalist or family doctor, sees

adults and children with a broad range of health problems.

Primary care also includes the management of acute and chronic

illnesses, prevention, counseling and referrals to specialists.

Primary care physicians are in high demand in Nebraska,

especially in many rural areas where there is a shortage of

physicians. U.S. health experts agree that primary care

physicians should make up the majority of physicians. In the past

25 years, the nation’s total supply of primary care physicians

decreased to about 30 percent of the workforce, according to the

Association of American Medical Colleges.

Organizers of National Primary Care Day at UNMC are

second-year medical students, Kristin Warner of Papillion, and

Cori Kolder of Columbus.

National Primary Care Day activities planned at UNMC for

Thursday, Oct. 2:

10 – 10:50 a.m. — Keynote speaker Dan Dietrich,

M.D., family physician, will talk about care of Omaha’s

underserved (those with financial, transportation or language

barriers that limit their accessibility to health care services)

11 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. — a panel of faculty will

talk about why they chose primary care and the challenges of

primary care

12:15 – 12:30 p.m. — Presentation on the new

UNMC student-run health center in South Omaha

12:30 – 4 p.m. — Students will get hands-on

training in basic laboratory medical tests

"UNMC is training Nebraskans to fill the need for primary

care physicians in rural areas," said Kolder. "As

medical students, we are trying to get first- and second-year

students to think about primary care as a medical career by

making students aware of the value of primary care physicians and

by providing information about the range of career opportunities

available to them." The number of students choosing primary

care now is increasing due to the efforts of medical

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schools across the U.S. UNMC has been involved for decades in

trying to increase the number of students choosing primary care.

In March, 63 percent of UNMC senior medical students entered

primary care residencies, according to Harold M. Maurer, M.D.,

dean of the UNMC College of Medicine. In 1994, it was 44 percent.

UNMC’s goal is to have more than half of its graduating

medical students choose primary care fields.

UNMC currently is ranked 25th out of 125 medical schools in

the nation in the number of medical residents choosing primary

care as their field of medicine, according to Robert Bowman,

M.D., UNMC family medicine department. More than 70 percent of

family physicians practicing in Nebraska graduated from UNMC.

UNMC curriculum and clinical experiences are designed to

increase interest in primary care and in rural health careers.

Every year, 220 UNMC medical students are required to work with

physicians for three weeks in rural Nebraska as part of their

educational requirements.

The student rotations are part of the UNMC Rural Health

Education Network (RHEN), an innovative program developed to help

address the shortage of health professionals in rural Nebraska.

UNMC continues to work with state agencies and communities across

Nebraska to reduce the shortages of physicians and health

professionals in Nebraska.

Primary Care Day is sponsored by the American Medical Student

Association, as well as other national medical associations.

UNMC is the only public academic health science center in the

state. Through its commitment to research, education and patient

care, UNMC has established itself as one of the country’s leading

centers for cancer research and treatment and solid organ

transplantation. Nearly $25 million in research grants and

contracts are awarded to UNMC scientists annually. In addition,

UNMC’s educational programs are responsible for training more

health professionals practicing in Nebraska than any other

institution.

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