A Website Assessment of Interprofessional Education at Newly Established Medical Schools

Current guidelines recommend that medical education programs provide robust, interprofessional education to all health professions students. However, the extent to which newly established medical schools live up to the recommendations set for interprofessional education is not well understood. This abstract describes a study that analyzed information from the websites of newly established medical schools to…

State Responses to Address Workforce Needs in the Initial Wave of the Pandemic

States responded to the COVID-19 pandemic with a variety of approaches to ensure adequate health workforce capacity as well as strategies to expand access to care for needed services. In order to better understand pandemic issues and challenges faced by states as well as strategies they used to address them, the Health Workforce Technical Assistance…

The Use of Medical Scribes in Primary Care Settings: A Literature Synthesis

Clerical burdens have impacted primary care providers that are already facing changes to the healthcare landscape and workforce shortages. These pressures have negative implications for patient care and result in burnout and job dissatisfaction. Medical scribes have emerged as a solution to reduce clerical tasks and negative perceptions of patient/provider interactions associated with the use…

The Use of Interpreters in Health Centers: A Mixed-Methods Analysis

Health centers provide primary care to millions of patients with limited English proficiency (LEP) through language service programs. Approximately 25% of 30 million patients who received care at health centers in 2019 had LEP and needed interpreters when clinicians and other staff were not fluent in their language. This article examines interpreter use in health…

How Governor Directives Changed Health Workforce Flexibility in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic

In times of heightened population health needs, the health workforce must respond quickly and efficiently, especially at the state level. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed the needs for greater flexibility in scope of practice and interstate mobility areas of health workforce regulation. The lack of a coordinated national response early in the pandemic left the onus…

The Use of Interpreters in Health Centers: A Mixed-Methods Analysis

Health centers provide primary care to millions of patients with limited English proficiency (LEP) through language service programs. Approximately 25% of 30 million patients who received care at health centers in 2019 had LEP and needed interpreters when clinicians and other staff were not fluent in their language. This article examines interpreter use in health…

The Use of Medical Scribes in Primary Care Settings: A Literature Synthesis

Clerical burdens have impacted primary care providers that are already facing changes to the healthcare landscape and workforce shortages. These pressures have negative implications for patient care and result in burnout and job dissatisfaction. Medical scribes have emerged as a solution to reduce clerical tasks and negative perceptions of patient/provider interactions associated with the use…

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