For more information contact: Boonshoft
School of Medicine, Judi Engle,
Office of Public Relations, (937) 775-2951
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 11, 1997
Wright State tops National Ranking for graduates entering Primary Care
DAYTON, OHIO -- Wright State University School of Medicine continues
to rank at the top of the nation's medical schools in terms of graduates
practicing primary care medicine, according to a national report published
recently by the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). The
AAMC's 1996 Institutional Goals Ranking Report ranked Wright State second
among 125 medical schools nationwide in the percentage of its graduates
entering primary care practices in family medicine, general internal
medicine and general pediatrics. Wright State ranked first in this percentage
among Ohio's six allopathic medical schools.
The report surveyed physicians from the graduating classes of 1990-92
who have completed residency training and entered medical practice. Forty-seven
percent of Wright State's graduates (115 of 244 physicians) entered primary
care practices.
"This ranking is particularly significant because it represents
the career choices of medical school graduates when they actually begin
their practices," explains Kim Goldenberg, M.D., dean of Wright
State School of Medicine. "Over the years, Wright State has ranked
consistently high in the percentages of our graduates who choose both
to enter primary care residencies and to follow through with primary
care practices. "We are proud of our achievement in primary care," he
continues. "It demonstrates how Wright State is meeting its mission
in achieving an effective balance between generalist and specialist physicians.
Credit for our success belongs to the excellent physician role models
on our full-time faculty as well as voluntary faculty in the community."
Training more primary care physicians has become a public policy goal
for medical schools in recent years. Many experts believe that half of
all medical school graduates should enter primary care specialties. A
1995 legislative report produced by the Ohio General Assembly found that
only 39 percent of Ohio's medical school graduates entered primary care
in recent years.
The annual AAMC report provides the nation's 125 allopathic medical
schools (six are in Ohio) with "benchmarks to determine their relative
achievement." Primary care is one of the report's five different
performance measures that reflect the wide range of institutional goals
set by American medical schools.
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