Jeff Hill, M.D., UNK Chancellor Doug Kristensen and Peggy Abels at a Tuesday news conference to announce the new KHOP program that is aimed at bringing more physicians to rural Nebraska. |
Workforce projections indicate a critical shortage of physicians in rural Nebraska in the next five to 10 years.
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The KHOP program targets high school seniors interested in family medicine. It is modeled after the Rural Health Opportunities Program (RHOP), which UNMC started in 1990 to encourage rural residents to pursue careers in health care and practice in small communities throughout Nebraska.
“More than 60 percent of RHOP graduates go on to practice in rural communities,” said Jeff Hill, M.D., associate dean for admissions and students in the College of Medicine. “We’re confident that the KHOP program will continue this tradition.”
Currently, 563 students are enrolled or have graduated from the RHOP program. Once accepted into RHOP, students obtain early admission into one of nine health professions at UNMC upon completion of their studies at Chadron State College or Wayne State College.
Contact Peggy Abels, director of health science programs at UNK, at 308-865-8260 or abelsp@unk.edu for more information about KHOP.