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Meeting the Critical Need for More Native American Physicians


 

The administration also has funded small rural hospitals and Medicare-certified Rural Health Clinics. Critical access hospitals and small hospitals in rural areas have a new option: to convert to a Rural Emergency Hospital (REH), a new Medicare provider type. CMS has changed the payment method for Tribal and Indian Health Services–operated REHs, to address certain barriers that may have discouraged Tribal and Indian Health Service (IHS)–operated hospitals from converting to REHs. Beginning in FY 2022, HHS, through HRSA, dedicated $5 million to provide technical assistance to rural hospitals that are considering converting to the REH designation.

HHS also has several grant opportunities to support rural communities, including $28 million to provide direct health services and expand infrastructure and $16 million to provide technical assistance to rural hospitals facing financial distress. This year, 60 rural hospitals will receive technical assistance to maintain financial viability and ensure continued access to care.

The HRSA National Health Service Corps Rural Community Loan Repayment Program has invested $80 million to support substance use disorder treatment, assist in recovery, and prevent overdose deaths. Medicare will also cover opioid use disorder treatment services delivered by mobile units of registered opioid treatment programs, which can now be accessed via telehealth or audio-only communications.

Curricula Also Lack Native Diversity

As of 2017, only 11% of MD-granting schools in the US say they have included Native American health content in their curricula. Dr. Owen notes some of the challenges indigenous students face: They are in a crowd that is primarily non-Native, far from their own family and community; unlike White students, they usually do not have mentors; they may not have the wherewithal to continue school and graduate.

A 2022 study of the association of sociodemographic characteristics with US medical student attrition, published in JAMA Internal Medicine , found that American Indian, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander students were more than 4 times as likely to drop out compared with White students. More than 10% of Indigenous medical students don’t graduate—the highest of any group the researchers examined.

In 1973 the University of North Dakota, for instance, launched Indians Into Medicine (INMED), a program that has since recruited, supported, and trained 250 American Indian doctors, and, in 2019, the country’s first PhD program in indigenous health. Dr. Warne, the director of INMED, calls it “by far, the most successful indigenous medical training program in the world,” having helped 228 American Indians and Alaska Natives graduate since its inception. A new cohort of 6 students has just enrolled.

Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) received $800,000 in federal funding for its Future Leaders in Indigenous Health (FLIGHT) project, managed through OHSU’s Northwest Native American Center of Excellence (NNACoE). In 2012, just 8 Native students were enrolled in the OHSU School of Medicine; a decade later, there were 29. In 2022, the newest medical class included 12 American Indian or Alaska Native students. According to the school, it is believed to be the largest group of Natives in any single US medical school MD class in history. The number of Native faculty in the OHSU School of Medicine grew from 7 in 2014 to 13 in 2022.

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