Rural medicine is every bit as complicated as any medical specialty. Before the era of subspecialization dominated medical education, most deans and experts including Flexner and Osler noted that small towns needed the best physicians. The real challenge to rural practice is not wasting your life, or being constantly bombarded with patient needs. The real challenge is pushing yourself to be the best physician you can be because you are caring for your friends, neighbors, and community. The rest of medicine may have not figured this out, but rural physicians have.
In order to prepare well for rural practice there are many obstacles to overcome. The chief ones are those that take students and residents away from active medical decision making. Over the years this has become so common as not to be noticed. Hope: Students From the Underserved, For the Underserved The difference of rural training is that the right kind of medical education is a higher priority in rural areas, not so much because of rural, but because rural doctors and others serving the underserved over the long haul understand what it takes to become a rural physician.Why a Preceptorship Is Better
Another rationale for bridging is the waste that can result if the right students are admitted, but find no appropriate programs to facilitate their needs in later years. A total waste is to begin at the end of the pipeline without having the right students in place. Bridging keeps the flow of rural physicians coordinated and intact. Others strategies at Rural Curricula, Strategies, Guidelines
Bridging is a method of keeping potential rural physicians in the rural pipeline. It is also a method of providing a suitable alternative curriculum in a medical education system that no longer meets the needs of primary care training and preparation for rural practice. The transitions in medical education are many. These include determination to become a doctor, the admissions process, the move from basic science to clinical, graduation to residency, becoming physicians in attitude, graduation to rural practice, and determination to stay in rural practice.
Some of the most successful rural medical education (and medical education) programs use bridging techniques. Here are some examples of these transitions
This leaves many questions, including
How much can we patch the existing system before total reform is necessary? too late
How much of a role can Family Medicine take on in medical schools?
Generalism, Generalists, Specialists, and Medical Education
How much can rural communities and practitioners do?
The Role of the Rural Community and Practitioner
How will licensure changes and restrictions impact medical training?
Accreditation and Demands of Rural Practice
Successful combinations of programs
Multilevel Examples, Statewide
Minnesota - Duluth - RPAP
Nebraska - RHOP, Rural Preceptorship, Accelerated or RTT programs
Of all the items mentioned above, the least understood is the determination to stay, retention area. This seems most related to the type of preparation for rural practice. This preparation shapes the confidence, competence, and attitudes of the students and residents. Better preparation may allow trainees to explore better how they fit with certain types of communities and practitioners, for a better long term relationship or even a lifetime spent in one community.
The reasons for attempting to have physicians stay longer include:
By the numbers: Rural Doctors and Rural Economies
Breeding Young Professionals and Healthier Rural Communities
Recruiting New Rural Practitioners
Self Assessment of Community Recruitment Effort