The PreDoc Program: Pipeline Healthcare Apprenticeship Program through the Lens of a Neurologist
Author(s) -
Rachel Marie E. Salas,
Alyssa Gamaldo,
Roy E. Strowd,
Seulah Choi,
Laurence T. Hou,
John Shatzer,
Keri Bischoff,
Charlene E. Gamaldo
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
mededpublish
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2312-7996
DOI - 10.15694/mep.2019.000063.1
Subject(s) - apprenticeship , curriculum , medical education , health care , mentorship , psychology , program director , academic medicine , graduation (instrument) , medicine , pedagogy , political science , engineering , mechanical engineering , law , philosophy , linguistics
This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. Objective: The PreDoc program is a longitudinal apprenticeship aimed at increasing college student interest in pursuing a healthcare career. This program offers the continuity of clinical, research, and educational exposure in academic medicine utilizing a career immersion approach that allows a graduated level of responsibility, experience, and leadership opportunities. Methods: Students get an asynchronous/synchronous curriculum under the direction of academic physicians committed to boosting the pipeline. Training in critical career development skills including "goal setting," professionalism, communication, and time management are provided to Pre-Docs by their senior peers and program leaders. Results: Since the implementation of the PreDoc program in 2013, 28 students have enrolled in the program. Twenty-three students completed the survey; 100% ranked the program quality as good/excellent. Students reported more interest in academic medicine (n=19, 83%), neurology (n=18, 78%), and sleep medicine (n=18, 78%). A majority of the students reported that they were extremely likely to pursue a medical career (n=20, 87%). All students have completed or are in the process of completing at least one scholarly product. Conclusions: The PreDoc program has been successful in promoting college student scholarly productivity in healthcare and in garnering student interest in academic medicine, particularly in neurology.
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