June 19, 2009Diverse high-schoolers get a
summertime peek inside the world of medicine
By Meredith Fraser
Addressing
disparities in Florida’s physician workforce requires starting early
– long before the start of the medical-school admissions process.
The Florida State University College of Medicine, through its
outreach programs, seeks first to tilt the odds in favor of finding
more qualified medical students from underrepresented backgrounds.
Studies show that such students, once they become physicians, are
more likely to care for populations faced with the biggest doctor
shortages.
The newest part of that effort is a summer “mini-med school”
experience for high-school students.
The College of Medicine Summer Institute is a weeklong event for
rising high-school juniors and seniors, providing an inside look at
what it means to be both a doctor and a medical student. But more
than that, it’s another way to encourage students from diverse
backgrounds to imagine themselves in the role of physician.
Typically, children from medically underserved communities or
backgrounds never get the encouragement to consider a career in
medicine.
To introduce such an idea at an early age, the College of
Medicine works with middle- and high-school ers through SSTRIDE
(Science Students Together Reaching Instructional Diversity and
Excellence). It’s an ongoing program aimed at inspiring an interest
in the medical sciences among students who might otherwise never
consider a future as a scientist or physician.
“Our goal for the Summer Institute is to recruit students from
rural, underserved and minority backgrounds and, at the same time,
recruit students from other parts of Florida who have a desire to
work in medically underserved areas,” said Thesla Berne-Anderson,
director of college and pre-college outreach at the College of
Medicine.
“The philosophy of the Summer Institute is similar to how the
College of Medicine’s admissions process works. Also, it helps in
our effort to recruit students for our Medical Honors Scholars
program, along with helping identify high-school students who might
join our SSTRIDE program.”
The focus on minority recruitment stems from the college’s
founding mission to help train doctors for Florida’s traditionally
underserved populations. A 2007 study indicated that fewer than 5
percent of Florida’s practicing physicians are African-American and
15 percent are Hispanic. By contrast, the U.S. Census Bureau
classifies nearly 16 percent of Florida’s overall population as
African-American and more than 20 percent as Hispanic. As Florida’s
population continues to grow and its number of practicing physicians
declines, people who were underserved from the beginning suffer all
the more.
The first week of the Summer Institute (June 13-20) brought in 15
participants, all of whom will enter 11th or 12th grade this fall.
The students hail from Gadsden, Volusia, Madison, Orange and Leon
counties. The second week boasts 17 participants who come from nine
counties.
The students had the opportunity to shadow physicians and College
of Medicine students, visit rural health centers and get college
testing and application advice. They also attended faculty lectures
on topics such as medical ethics, migrant health care and
doctor-patient relations.
In one activity, they trained in the Charlotte Edwards Maguire,
M.D. and Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare Center for Clinical
Simulation. They could examine high-tech “manikins” programmed to
display certain vital signs such as pulse, lung activity and blood
pressure. Using real medical equipment, participants performed
simulated medical examinations with med students as guides.
Participants Ysabel Ilagan of Orlando, Imanuel Gayle of
Tallahassee and Persis Mistry of Daytona Beach inspected one manikin
with guidance from second-year medical student Carolina Pereira.
“Blood pressure is definitely the trickiest [vital sign] to
figure out,” said Ilagan as she completed a reading. While the
students reported “healthy” results from several manikins, one case
presented a challenge: The patient displayed elevated blood
pressure, which Ilagan correctly identified as a symptom of
hypertension.
When the manikin’s lung or heart function became the object of
scrutiny, the students could simultaneously listen to the vital
signs through small speakers projecting the same sounds a
stethoscope would detect in a real-life situation. It’s the same
technology used to promote discussion among medical students as they
acquire the basic physical-examination skills required of a
competent and compassionate physician.
With one Summer Institute participant in charge of the
stethoscope’s placement, Pereira coached the students on how to best
listen to each of the four chambers of the heart, leaving it up to
them to determine whether the heart was healthy. Working together,
the students diagnosed one manikin with a heart murmur, and they
detected worrisome symptoms in another – which Pereira then
explained as a condition called aortic stenosis.
Summer Institute participants come from communities throughout
Florida. The College of Medicine’s six regional campuses – in
Daytona Beach, Fort Pierce, Orlando, Pensacola, Sarasota and
Tallahassee – invite students from their area high schools to apply.
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