Knowledge (XXG)

Area Health Education Centers Program

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105:. The report was concerned with "the serious shortage of professional health manpower, the need for expanding and restructuring the education of professional health personnel, and the vital importance of adapting the education of health manpower to the changes needed for an effective system of delivery of health care in the United States." Among its many recommendations for remedying the problems it detailed, the Carnegie Commission urged a cooperative relationship between communities and health science centers, geographic dispersion of health training centers, shortened training periods for physicians, and creation of "126 area health education centers (AHECs) to serve localities without a health science center." The Commission also charged universities "to cooperate with other agencies in helping to develop more effective health care delivery systems in their communities and surrounding areas." These and other recommendations were designed to "put essential health services within one hour of driving time for over 95 percent of all Americans and within this same amount of time for all health care personnel." 46:, in 2015 more than 300 AHEC program offices and centers comprised the national AHEC network. AHECs are distributed across 48 states and the District of Columbia. In each state, the central program office(s) associated with a university health science center administrates the program and coordinates the efforts of the state’s regional AHECs. "Organization and staffing of AHECs varies greatly and is dependent on the supporting academic health center and availability of financial resources," as well as the particular needs of the local area. "Each regional center has an office staffed by a center director and a variable number of support staff that may include an education coordinator, librarian, and 1 or more educators or program coordinators." Some AHECs also operate family medicine residency programs, employing medical personnel and support staff. 65:: AHECs attempt to expand the health care workforce, including maximizing diversity and facilitating distribution, especially in underserved communities. To achieve this goal, AHECs offer health career camps, science enrichment programs, healthy lifestyle programs, health careers curricula and programs for elementary, middle school, and high school students. These programs introduce students to a wide assortment of health career possibilities, guide them in goal setting and educational planning, and offer science courses to strengthen critical thinking skills. Working with K-12 schools, colleges and community partners, AHECs target both economically disadvantaged students and those from underrepresented minority groups in school programs and summer institutes. 71:: AHECs provide community placements, service learning opportunities and clinical experiences for medical, dental, physician assistant, nursing, pharmacy and allied health students and residents in rural and urban underserved communities. AHEC placements (rotations) give them the opportunity to experience health care in settings that differ from typical health science centers. Through interaction with patients in hospitals, community health centers, county health departments, free health care clinics, and local practitioner’s offices, students and residents can observe the economic and cultural barriers to care and the needs of underserved and ethnically diverse populations in a primary care environment. 160:"The responsibility for administering federal support of AHECs in conformity with the Carnegie model, that is, through contracts with university health centers, was assigned by June to the BHME in DHEW by the Office of Management and Budget…on June 12, 1972 the BHME released a letter of announcement of a program for the support of AHECs, which was sent to all who had requested information regarding the ‘Health Manpower Initiative Awards’ of the Comprehensive Health Manpower Training Act of 1971 ... They were told that the government would refuse to consider any response postmarked later than June 25, 1972 ... The announcement…stated that contracts would be awarded no later than September 30, 1972. 129:
Proprietary two-year institutions that resembled trade schools for physicians came under particular criticism. In the period following the Flexner Report, the number of medical school graduates and medical schools declined, with the number of medical schools stabilizing at 76 by 1929. Conversely, the population was steadily increasing, with a rise of 35 million between 1925 and 1950. Declaring a crisis in meeting the health care needs of the population, the Carnegie Commission report of 1970 called for policies that would increase the health care workforce to fill the growing gaps in health care.
93: 153: 163:"(In any consideration of the history of the first 11 AHECs, the short time span between the announcement of the federal program on June 12 and the award of contracts on September 30 should be kept firmly in mind.)" "The national AHEC office not only had to work fast; it was also understaffed from its inception, with only three professional employees to supervise relations with 11 projects widely scattered over the nation." 39:
health care workers are likely to remain in an area where they train. An AHEC also works to support practicing professionals with continuing education programs and other support resources and to attract youth (particularly those from minority and medically underserved populations) to health care professions. An AHEC partners with community organizations and academic institutions to fulfill its mission.
77:: AHECs provide accredited continuing education offerings and professional support for health care professionals, especially those practicing in underserved areas. These programs are designed to enhance clinical skills and help maintain professional certifications. Programs also focus on recruitment, placement, and retention activities to address health care workforce needs. 674:
United States Congress. Departments of Labor and Health Education and Welfare Appropriations for 1979. Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations. 95th Congress, 2nd sess. Part 2. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Testimony of the Secretary. Special and Investigative
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Univ. of California at San Francisco, Univ. of Illinois, Univ. of Minnesota, Univ. of Missouri (Kansas City), Univ. of New Mexico (serving the Navajo Reservation in the four-corner area of NM, AZ, UT and CO), University of North Carolina, Medical Univ. of South Carolina, Univ. of North Dakota, Univ.
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According to the House Appropriations Report for fiscal 1979, "In September 1977, just before the original contracts expired, BHM awarded 1-year contracts, totaling $ 14 million for the continuation of the existing AHEC's. BHM, at that time, also awarded 1-year contracts, totaling $ 700,000 to four
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In 1971, "Congress passed the Comprehensive Health Manpower Training Act (Public Law 92-157), which in provided the AHEC Program with legislative authority." In 1972, 11 universities were awarded five-year, "incrementally funded, cost-shared contracts for AHEC programs." In 1977, Public Law 94-484
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This landmark report proposed a new model for health care education, noting that "The United States today faces only one serious manpower shortage, and that is in health care personnel. This shortage can become even more acute as health insurance expands, leading to even more unmet needs and greater
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1969 GPO map showing states, counties and regional economics divisions that was used for planning the Area Health Education Center Program. It demonstrates the early interest and discussion by officials on the need and value of a nationwide AHEC-type system based on manpower shortage areas. (Source,
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AHECs are nonprofit organizations strategically located within designated regions where health care and health care education needs are not adequately met. An AHEC works within its region to make health care education (including residency and student rotations) locally available, on the premise that
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The House Appropriations hearing report stated: "certain staffing patterns were noted in BHM which indicate that there may be staffing imbalances among divisions ... . the Division of Medicine was administering about four times the amount of funds administered by the Division of Dentistry, but with
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In a footnote to his report, Odegaard cited sources of information on the AHEC program. He noted, "An additional source of information is found in the response to a request for information from the congressional surveys and investigation staff contained in a letter of reply dated December 23, 1977
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is a federally funded program established in the United States in 1972 "to improve the supply, distribution, retention and quality of primary care and other health practitioners in medically underserved areas." The program is "part of a national effort to improve access to health services through
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The new model of 1970 called for increased production of health care professionals, an increase in the number of training centers, geographic dispersion of training centers, expanded use and increased production of trained supportive professionals (physician assistants, nurse practitioners, and
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during visits to 147 medical schools in the U.S. and eight in Canada, the Carnegie report recommended increasing the quality of medical care by physicians by increasing admittance and graduation standards, extending training periods, and eliminating medical schools that did not meet standards.
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Today, the AHEC Program is administered by the Division of Diversity and Interdisciplinary Education, Bureau of Health Professions (Title VII), in the Health Resources and Services Administration. "Cost-sharing contracts provide support for planning and development (not to exceed 2 years) and
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Expanding the roles and increasing the supply of supportive personnel, noting that "Allied health personnel can be trained more quickly and less expensively than doctors and dentists, and their availability will make possible the better use of the time and skill of doctors and
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In 1999, Ricketts reported that "AHEC programs have coordinated and supported the training of nearly 1.5 million health professions students and primary care residents in underserved areas with an explicit focus on rural areas in most state programs."
199:"The National AHEC Program has been a successful catalyst for forming educational linkages between health science centers and communities," reported Gessert and Smith, then senior medical officer and the chief of the AHEC Branch, Division of Medicine, 167:
24 percent less staff…In sharper contrast, the AHEC staff was administering funds totaling about 44 percent of the funds administered by the Division of Dentistry, but with only 3 percent of the size of the Division of Dentistry staff."
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From 1972 to 1976, a statistically significant increase in dentist-to-population ratios was noted in AHEC target counties compared to counties without AHEC programs, even though not all of the AHEC target counties had specific dental
207:, respectively. Further, Gessert and Smith's 1981 report cites these specific findings reported to Congress in 1979 by the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare on assessment of the original 11 AHEC programs funded in 1972: 83:: AHECs evaluate the health needs of their regions and provide responses to those needs. AHECs develop community health education and health provider training programs in areas with diverse and underserved populations. 233:, National Association of Community Health Centers, and the Health Professions Nursing and Education Coalition have focused attention on the need for restoring and expanding AHECs and other Title VII programs." 184:
other medical schools for the planning of new AHECs." After 1984, additional programs were funded. Funding continues to be focused on primary care in rural and inner city areas that are medically underserved.
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Expanding "the number of places for training doctors during this next decade by 50 percent, and of dentists by 20 percent. Many of these new places should be filled by women and members of minority groups."
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from Daniel R. Smith, Chief, AHEC staff and National Coordinator and the only federal official in the executive branch who has been associated with the federal AHEC program since its implementation."
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Flexner A (1910). Medical Education in the United States and Canada: A Report to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Bulletin No. 4. D.B. Updyke, The Merrymount Press, Boston, MA
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Map of suggested AHECs in 1970 Carnegie Commission Report. (Source, United States Congress. Departments of Labor and Health Education and Welfare Appropriations for 1979, p. 465.)
196:"The Carnegie Council reaffirmed faith in the AHEC concept, regarding the formation of AHECs 'as one of the most encouraging and impressive developments under the 1971 legislation.'" 221:
AHECs provided continuing education programs for health practitioners in medicine (122,750), dentistry (14,140), nursing (96,990), pharmacy (7,730), and allied health (46,630).
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Collectively, graduates of medical schools with AHEC programs were more likely to choose primary care residency positions than graduates of medical schools without AHEC programs.
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Carnegie Commission (1970). Higher Education and the Nation’s Health: Policies for Medical and Dental Education, A Special Report and Recommendations, McGraw-Hill Book Company,
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AHECs are challenged to become increasingly self-funded in response to ongoing federal and state budget cuts since 2000. "Advocates including the National AHEC Organization,
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to supplement physicians and dentists, and increased diversity of persons trained. "To serve all the people everywhere," the new model called for the following changes:
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Physician supply in AHEC target counties increased 12.2 percent from 1972 to 1976, compared to an increase of 7.1 percent in similar counties without AHEC activities.
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operation of the AHEC Program." AHEC programs competitively seek funding from their states and the federal Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).
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The medical education model proposed by the Carnegie Commission in 1970 represented a significant divergence from the Flexner model stimulated by the
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A Legislative History of Federal Assistance for Health Professions Training in Primary Care Medicine and Dentistry in the United States, 1963–2008
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Odegaard, CE (1979). Area health education centers: the pioneering years 1972-1978. Carnegie Council on Policy Studies in Higher Education,
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Increasing the number and dispersion of allied health training centers to include "comprehensive colleges and community colleges."
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cost inflation, unless corrective action is taken now. It takes a long lead time to get more doctors and dentists."
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changes in the education and training of health professionals." The program particularly focuses on primary care.
134: 58:, the professional association of AHECs, reports that most regional AHECs work in the following program areas: 495:
of Texas Medical Branch Galveston, Tufts Univ. serving Maine, and West Virginia Univ. Odegaarde, 1979, p. 20
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Schematic showing Carnegie Model by the National AHEC office. (Source, personal collection Daniel R. Smith.)
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Seibert, EM (2005). Organization and staffing of regional AHECs. AANA Journal. Oct 2005; 73(5) 345-349
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of 1910 to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Based on research by
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Ricketts TC, editor (1999), Rural Health in the United States, Oxford University Press,
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The National Area Health Education Center program and primary care residency training
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Higher Education and the Nation’s Health: Policies for Medical and Dental Education
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The National AHEC Program: Review of Its Progress and Considerations for the 1980s
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The AHEC concept and mission originated in a 1970 Carnegie Commission report,
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personal collection, Daniel R. Smith, former National AHEC Coordinator).
306:"National Area Health Education Center Organization (NAO) - Programs" 91: 620:
http://www.aamc.org/newsroom/reporter/dec09/viewpoint.htm
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Viewpoint: AHECs: A National Tool for Maldistribution
8: 205:Health Resources and Services Administration 32:Area Health Education Centers (AHEC) Program 637:Gessert, Charles and Smith, Daniel (1981). 611:. J Rural Health. Summer 2000; 16(3) 288-94 607:Bacon TJ, Baden DJ, Coccodrilli LD (2000). 63:Health Careers Recruitment and Preparation 151: 111: 242: 658:. Academic Medicine, Nov 2008; 83(11) 7: 618:. Retrieved February 1, 2010 from 25: 231:National Rural Health Association 522:United States Cong. 1978, p. 376 467:United States Cong. 1978. p. 422 81:Health and Community Development 705:Healthcare in the United States 675:Reports. Washington: GPO. 1978 576:Gessert and Smith 1981, p. 119 567:Gessert and Smith 1981, p. 120 540:Gessert and Smith 1981, p. 117 513:Gessert and Smith 1981, p. 117 504:Gessert and Smith 1981, p. 116 485:Gessert and Smith 1981, p. 116 267:Gessert and Smith 1981, p. 116 258:Gessert and Smith 1981, p. 116 180:funded 12 more AHEC programs. 1: 201:Bureau of Health Professions 75:Health Professionals Support 303:Retrieved Feb 5, 2010 from 69:Health Professions Training 721: 641:, Public Health Rep. 96(2) 56:National AHEC Organization 44:National AHEC Organization 27:US federal medical program 135:allied health professions 18:The National AHEC Program 440:Odegaard 1979 pp. 14-15 175:Legislation and funding 585:Rickets 1999, p. 68-69 531:Reynolds 2008, p. 1008 386:Reynolds 2008, p. 1004 157: 117: 98: 395:Carnegie 1970, p. 4-5 377:Reynolds 2008, p.1004 155: 115: 95: 654:Reynolds PP (2008). 614:Blossom, HJ (2009). 449:Odegaard 1979 pp. 15 350:Carnegie 1970, p 6-9 341:Carnegie 1970, p. 91 192:Program achievements 476:Odegaard 1979 p. 21 458:Odegaard 1979 p. 21 431:Carnegie 1970, p. 6 422:Carnegie 1970, p. 6 413:Carnegie 1970, p. 6 404:Carnegie 1970, p. 6 359:Carnegie 1970, p. 2 329:Carnegie 1970, p. 249:Bacon 2000, p. 288 158: 118: 99: 558:Odegaard, page 35 42:According to the 16:(Redirected from 712: 691: 690: 688:Official website 595: 592: 586: 583: 577: 574: 568: 565: 559: 556: 550: 547: 541: 538: 532: 529: 523: 520: 514: 511: 505: 502: 496: 492: 486: 483: 477: 474: 468: 465: 459: 456: 450: 447: 441: 438: 432: 429: 423: 420: 414: 411: 405: 402: 396: 393: 387: 384: 378: 375: 369: 366: 360: 357: 351: 348: 342: 339: 333: 327: 321: 320: 318: 317: 308:. Archived from 301: 295: 292: 286: 283: 277: 274: 268: 265: 259: 256: 250: 247: 21: 720: 719: 715: 714: 713: 711: 710: 709: 695: 694: 686: 685: 682: 604: 599: 598: 593: 589: 584: 580: 575: 571: 566: 562: 557: 553: 548: 544: 539: 535: 530: 526: 521: 517: 512: 508: 503: 499: 493: 489: 484: 480: 475: 471: 466: 462: 457: 453: 448: 444: 439: 435: 430: 426: 421: 417: 412: 408: 403: 399: 394: 390: 385: 381: 376: 372: 367: 363: 358: 354: 349: 345: 340: 336: 328: 324: 315: 313: 304: 302: 298: 294:Seibert, p. 346 293: 289: 285:Seibert, p. 346 284: 280: 275: 271: 266: 262: 257: 253: 248: 244: 239: 194: 177: 126:Abraham Flexner 90: 52: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 718: 716: 708: 707: 697: 696: 693: 692: 681: 680:External links 678: 677: 676: 672: 669: 659: 652: 642: 635: 632: 622: 612: 603: 600: 597: 596: 587: 578: 569: 560: 551: 542: 533: 524: 515: 506: 497: 487: 478: 469: 460: 451: 442: 433: 424: 415: 406: 397: 388: 379: 370: 361: 352: 343: 334: 322: 296: 287: 278: 269: 260: 251: 241: 240: 238: 235: 223: 222: 219: 216: 212: 193: 190: 176: 173: 150: 149: 146: 142: 122:Flexner Report 89: 86: 85: 84: 78: 72: 66: 51: 48: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 717: 706: 703: 702: 700: 689: 684: 683: 679: 673: 670: 668: 667:0-19-513127-4 664: 660: 657: 653: 651: 650:0-931050-15-4 647: 643: 640: 636: 633: 631: 630:0-07-010021-7 627: 623: 621: 617: 613: 610: 606: 605: 601: 591: 588: 582: 579: 573: 570: 564: 561: 555: 552: 546: 543: 537: 534: 528: 525: 519: 516: 510: 507: 501: 498: 491: 488: 482: 479: 473: 470: 464: 461: 455: 452: 446: 443: 437: 434: 428: 425: 419: 416: 410: 407: 401: 398: 392: 389: 383: 380: 374: 371: 365: 362: 356: 353: 347: 344: 338: 335: 332: 326: 323: 312:on 2009-12-06 311: 307: 300: 297: 291: 288: 282: 279: 273: 270: 264: 261: 255: 252: 246: 243: 236: 234: 232: 227: 220: 217: 213: 210: 209: 208: 206: 202: 197: 191: 189: 185: 181: 174: 172: 168: 164: 161: 154: 147: 143: 140: 139: 138: 136: 130: 127: 123: 114: 110: 106: 104: 94: 87: 82: 79: 76: 73: 70: 67: 64: 61: 60: 59: 57: 49: 47: 45: 40: 36: 33: 19: 655: 638: 615: 608: 594:Blossom 2009 590: 581: 572: 563: 554: 549:Blossom 2009 545: 536: 527: 518: 509: 500: 490: 481: 472: 463: 454: 445: 436: 427: 418: 409: 400: 391: 382: 373: 368:Flexner 1910 364: 355: 346: 337: 330: 325: 314:. Retrieved 310:the original 299: 290: 281: 276:Blossom 2009 272: 263: 254: 245: 228: 224: 198: 195: 186: 182: 178: 169: 165: 162: 159: 131: 119: 107: 102: 100: 80: 74: 68: 62: 53: 41: 37: 31: 29: 316:2010-02-03 237:References 145:dentists." 215:programs. 699:Category 602:Sources 88:History 50:Purpose 665:  648:  628:  663:ISBN 646:ISBN 626:ISBN 54:The 30:The 701:: 203:, 331:v 319:. 20:)

Index

The National AHEC Program
National AHEC Organization
National AHEC Organization


Flexner Report
Abraham Flexner
allied health professions

Bureau of Health Professions
Health Resources and Services Administration
National Rural Health Association
"National Area Health Education Center Organization (NAO) - Programs"
the original
http://www.aamc.org/newsroom/reporter/dec09/viewpoint.htm
ISBN
0-07-010021-7
ISBN
0-931050-15-4
ISBN
0-19-513127-4
Official website
Category
Healthcare in the United States

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