The Social Mission of Medical Education: Ranking the Schools

Fitzhugh Mullan, Candice Chen, Stephen Petterson, Gretchen Kolsky, Michael Spagnola

Annals of Internal Medicine, 2010

"The basic purpose of medical schools is to educate physicians to care for the national population. Fulfilling this goal requires an adequate number of primary care physicians, adequate distribution of physicians to underserved areas, and a sufficient number of minority physicians in the workforce. The objective of this study was to develop a metric called the social mission score to evaluate medical school output in these 3 dimensions. A secondary analysis of data from the American Medical Association (AMA) Physician Masterfile and of data on race and ethnicity in medical schools from the Association of American Medical Colleges and the American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine was conducted. Medical schools vary substantially in their contribution to the social mission of medical education. School rankings based on the social mission score differ from those that use research funding and subjective assessments of school reputation. These findings suggest that initiatives at the medical school level could increase the proportion of physicians who practice primary care, work in underserved areas, and are underrepresented minorities."

Access Full Text

NIH Guide LISTSERV

In addition, should anyone be interested in receiving new funding opportunity announcements as they are released they can subscribe to the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts which is the official publication for NIH medical and behavioral research Grant Policies, Guidelines and Funding Opportunities.

To Subscribe to the NIH Guide LISTSERV, send an e-mail to listserv@list.nih.gov with the following text in the message body (not the "Subject" line):
subscribe NIHTOC-L your name
(Example: subscribe NIHTOC-L Bill Jones)
Your e-mail address will be automatically obtained from the e-mail message and add you to the LISTSERV.