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Medical Student from Ketchikan Advances in Medical Program

 

December 22, 2017
Friday PM


(SitNews) Ketchikan, Alaska - Twenty medical students attending the University of Washington School of Medicine at the University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA), are moving on to the clinical phase of their education.

Medical Student from Ketchikan Advances in Medical Program

Erik Pihl, a second-year medical student from Ketchikan.
Photo courtesy University of Washington Medical School

Among the students is Erik Pihl, a second-year medical student from Ketchikan. Erik attended Ketchikan High School, and double-majored in Mathematics and Biochemistry at Gonzaga University in Spokane, WA.

During a ceremony this week at UAA, the students were presented with personalized white coats that signal the end to their time studying basic science curriculum, and the beginning of their practical/clinical study in hospitals and clinics.

During the first 18-months of medical school – the Foundations Phase – students are learning about the molecular and cellular basis of disease, circulatory systems, anatomy, blood and cancer, and other basic science subjects. Additionally, through a new curriculum that launched in 2015, each student also spends time in a primary care clinic with a mentor from the very beginning of medical school. After completing Foundations they go on to the clinical phase of their education, completing required and elective clerkship rotations at clinics and hospitals throughout the WWAMI region.

“We are very fortunate to have such a high-quality medical school experience in Alaska,” said Jane Shelby, Ph.D., assistant dean for the Foundations Phase at UAA.

Shelby said, “The transition ceremony represents the successful completion of a very rigorous curriculum, and these students and our state should be very proud of their accomplishment. Through this state-supported program, Alaska medical students are given the opportunity to realize their dreams of becoming physicians. This is especially important for rural communities such as Barrow, Chugiak, Kasilof, Kenai and Talkeetna, in dire need of physicians.”

WWAMI is a partnership between the University of Washington School of Medicine and the states of Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho, established in the early 1970s to offer residents state-supported medical education with a goal to increase the primary care physician workforce in each of these states. Students attend Foundations classes in their home states at the University of Washington in Seattle, Gonzaga University in Spokane, WA, the University of Wyoming in Laramie, the University of Alaska Anchorage, Montana State University in Bozeman, or the University of Idaho in Moscow. 

The University of Washington School of Medicine has been ranked as the #1 medical school for primary care education, family medicine and rural medicine training by U.S. News & World Report for more than two decades.

WWAMI is heralded as one of the most innovative medical education and training programs in the U.S.

 

 

Editing by Mary Kauffman, SitNews

 

Source of News:

University of Washington School of Medicine & WWAMI
www.uw.edu

 

 

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