This week marked a pivotal development in health equity policy, as U.S. legislators from Oklahoma and Nevada took the lead in reintroducing the bipartisan Medical Student Education Authorization Act, which provides support for the Medical Student Education (MSE) Program through 2025 if annually renewed. The proposed renewal of the funding comes amid greater recognition that rural, tribal, underserved, and historically marginalized communities attract materially fewer medical students than more populated, well-resourced geographies. Thus, the MSE seeks to entice medical students and residents to those areas most in need of qualified health and medical professionals.
The MSE has been successful to date in tackling two distinct health equity challenges. First, on the patient side, individuals from less-resourced communities benefit from greater access to health and medical services. Second, on the medical student and practitioner side, increasingly diverse individuals disproportionately have participated, so patients can begin to meet with medical professionals who are of the same race, ethnicity and experience.
As one example of this diversity success, tribal communities now have roughly fifty percent of medical students self-identifying as Native American medical students who are participating in this program.
Additional information about this legislation can be found here.