The curriculum cuts out summer vacations, electives and the residency search. It’s designed to get primary care physicians into the field faster, says Dr. Tonya Fancher, director of the program, called Accelerated Competency-based Education in Primary Care, or ACE-PC .
“There’s a huge problem, a huge shortage of primary care physicians,” Fancher says.
UC Davis says more people gaining health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act is expected to compound the need for primary care, and one of the goals of the new curriculum is to make family medicine a more appealing and lasting choice for young doctors.
“Students come into medical school, they’re passionate about patients, passionate about primary care, and then that wanes over time,” Fancher says. “Part of it is probably the debt that they accrue in school, and part of it are the models of primary care that they’re traditionally exposed to.”
Texas, Georgia and New York also have three-year medical schools. And both the AMA and the Association of American Medical Colleges support these initiatives as part of the redesign of medical education. The physician groups want students to advance based on their competency, not a set time frame.
UC Davis’s ACE-PC medical students are guaranteed a residency, another training step before facing patient expectations on their own.
Outside the Sacramento health center where Nzigira and other students are getting their first experiences in clinical practice, people were not troubled by the idea of a faster track through medical school. Angela Woodard says even doctors with four years of training may have trouble treating patients.
“So them going to school a shorter time is not going to make it any worse,” Woodard said.
Patient Joe King isn’t too concerned either, “as long as they maintain the same critieria of standards that primary care doctors have to meet,” he said.
Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a nonprofit news organization covering health care policy and politics. It is an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation.