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The Need to Train Physicians for Rural Primary Health Care in Latin America: Some Family Medicine Experiences*
Authors:Frank A. Hale
Abstract:ABSTRACT: Training strategies to prepare physicians for rural primary care generally have not been a feature of medical education in Latin America. The emergence of family medicine as a specialty discipline has resulted in a number of primary care educational initiatives which are designed to give students or residents the knowledge and skills necessary to practice in rural settings. Specific programs in Mexico, Colombia, Chile, and Argentina are identified and discussed. These programs were selected because they raise a number of educational and manpower planning issues which teachers of family medicine and rural primary care need to address if the long-term viability of these programs is to be achieved. These issues include: the role of the community as an educational laboratory, the supervision of community-based learning experiences, the development of strong clinical and community health promotion skills, the reinforcement of positive primary care learning throughout training, and the development of rural health role models. Manpower planning issues to be addressed include: developing a more precise identity for the primary care physician, a re-examination of the pasantia or year of required community service, developing closer ties between the medical schools and the Ministries of Health and other institutional employers of physicians, and encouraging successful programs to share their experiences with others.
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