BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: There is a shortage of physicians in rural communities in the United States. More than other types of primary care phy-sicians, family physicians are the foundation for care in rural areas.1 There are also critical shortages of other specialties such as general surgery, pediatrics, in-ternal medicine, and psychiatry in rural America.2-7 This study assessed student participation in the University of Washington School of Medicine’s (UWSOM) Targeted Rural Underserved Track (TRUST) program as a predictor for family medicine (FM) and needed workforce specialty residency match. METHODS: The study group was 156 medical students from 2009-2014; 102 were accepted to the TRUST program compared to a control group of 54 who were not accepted into the TRUST program but did matriculate to UWSOM. Student characteristics for the two groups were compared using t tests. Logis-tic regression analysis determined whether acceptance in TRUST predicted the outcomes measures of FM residency match or residency match into a needed rural physician workforce specialty; t tests compared match rates to family medicine for TRUST applicants and graduates, UWSOM graduates, and US allopathic seniors. RESULTS: TRUST program graduates had the same FM residency match rate and match rate in needed workforce specialties as the control group. The FM match rate for TRUST graduates was 29.1% compared to UWSOM at 16.9% and US seniors at 8.7% (P
CITATION STYLE
Kardonsky, K., Evans, D. V., Erickson, J., & Kost, A. (2021). Impact of a targeted rural and underserved track on medical student match into family medicine and other needed workforce specialties. Family Medicine, 53(2), 111–117. https://doi.org/10.22454/FamMed.2021.351484
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