Publication | Closed Access
Reducing Medical School Admissions Disparities in an Era of Legal Restrictions: Adjusting for Applicant Socioeconomic Disadvantage
39
Citations
14
References
2016
Year
Applicant Socioeconomic DisadvantageHealth Care DisparityEducationHealth DisparitiesLawHealth LawRacial DisparitiesLegal RestrictionsHealth InequalityEducation LawDiverse Physician WorkforceHealth DisparityEducational DisadvantagePublic HealthAcademic MetricsHealth Services ResearchRacial EquityHealth PolicyHealth EquityEqual Educational OpportunityHigher EducationHealth EconomicsPhysician WorkforceEducation Policy
A diverse physician workforce is needed to increase access to care for underserved populations, particularly as the Affordable Care Act expands insurance coverage. Yet legal restrictions constrain the extent to which medical schools may use race/ethnicity in admissions decisions. We conducted simulations using academic metrics and socioeconomic data from applicants to a California public medical school from 2011 to 2013. The simulations systematically adjusted medical school applicants' academic metrics for socioeconomic disadvantage. We found that socioeconomic and under-represented minority disparities in admissions could be eliminated while maintaining academic readiness. Adjusting applicant academic metrics using socioeconomic information on medical school applications may be a race-neutral means of increasing the socioeconomic and racial/ethnic diversity of the physician workforce.
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