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Global Health and Primary Care: Increasing Burden of Chronic Diseases and Need for Integrated Training
Author(s) -
Truglio Joseph,
Graziano Michelle,
Vedanthan Rajesh,
Hahn Sigrid,
Rios Carlos,
HendelPaterson Brett,
Ripp Jonathan
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
mount sinai journal of medicine: a journal of translational and personalized medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1931-7581
pISSN - 0027-2507
DOI - 10.1002/msj.21327
Subject(s) - medicine , workforce , global health , social determinants of health , curriculum , health care , disease burden , integrated care , disease , public health , nursing , medical education , family medicine , economic growth , pathology , economics
Noncommunicable diseases, including cardiovascular disease, chronic respiratory disease, diabetes, cancer, and mental illness, are the leading causes of death and disability worldwide. These diseases are chronic and often mediated predominantly by social determinants of health. Currently there exists a global‐health workforce crisis and a subsequent disparity in the distribution of providers able to manage chronic noncommunicable diseases. Clinical competency in global health and primary care could provide practitioners with the knowledge and skills needed to address the global rise of noncommunicable diseases through an emphasis on these social determinants. The past decade has seen substantial growth in the number and quality of US global‐health and primary‐care training programs, in both undergraduate and graduate medical education. Despite their overlapping competencies, these 2 complementary fields are most often presented as distinct disciplines. Furthermore, many global‐health training programs suffer from a lack of a formalized curriculum. At present, there are only a few examples of well‐integrated US global‐health and primary‐care training programs. We call for universal acceptance of global health as a core component of medical education and greater integration of global‐health and primary‐care training programs in order to improve the quality of each and increase a global workforce prepared to manage noncommunicable diseases and their social mediators. Mt Sinai J Med 79:464–474, 2012 © 2012 Mount Sinai School of Medicine

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