NEWS

Area Health Education Center initiatives provide learning opportunities to medical providers

Housed at CMU, the Central and Western AHEC helps train and retain a diverse health care workforce

| Author: Kelly Belcher | Media Contact: April Osburn

The Central and Western Area Health Education Center places emphasis on training primary care physicians dedicated to serving the needs of underserved communities.  AHEC initiatives help develop and maintain a health professions workforce that is prepared to deliver high-quality care in a transforming health care delivery system.

Working with the health profession colleges at four universities in the region, AHEC connects educational and community resources to establish clinical training opportunities in rural and underserved areas.  Through these community-based student education programs, more than 3,600 health professions students have gained clinical rotation hours in underprivileged communities.

AHEC also supports health professionals by identifying continuing education needs and connecting clinicians to training opportunities. An additional 8,000 medical professionals statewide have received continuing education training in the areas of behavioral health integration, telehealth, social determinants of health and more. 

Annually, AHEC collaborates with the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe and the Bureau of Indian Affairs to present a Statewide Tribal Opioid Summit.  “AHEC has played a vital role in the annual Statewide Tribal Opioid Summit,” says Carol Jackson, magistrate for the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe, “AHEC’s team has greatly influenced the summit by reaching the targeted audiences necessary to provide awareness of the opioid epidemic that affects our local, rural and tribal communities across the state.”

The Central and Western AHEC also partnered with the Michigan Center for Rural Health, CMU Rural Health Equity Institute and McLaren Central Michigan to present a Human Trafficking Educational Webinar Series in the spring of 2024.  This free, three-part virtual series was designed to strengthen awareness, action plans and knowledge on the fight against human trafficking.  Over 1,300 people registered for at least one session, which included insights from an author’s personal perspective, an FBI victim specialist, a health care professional, and other community support personnel. 

The AHEC Scholars program has provided interdisciplinary and supplemental classroom learning opportunities for 250 health professions students preparing to enter the workforce.  This two-year program is part of a national initiative created to prepare health professions students to become leaders in primary care in rural and underserved areas.  “My participation in the AHEC Scholars program has allowed me to recognize that cultural and social barriers directly impact the quality of care, stated Bruke Abenet, a program participant from the Western Michigan University Homer Stryker M.D. School of Medicine’s family medicine residency program.  He continued, “to bridge this gap, all health care professionals must question their role and obligation and find ways to promote health equity.”

The Area Health Education Center program developed by Congress in 1971 works to recruit, train and retain a health care workforce committed to underserved populations. CMU’s College of Medicine is the host partner for the Central and Western Area Health Education Center, which serves two geographic regions totaling 38 counties (23 rural and 15 urban). For more information about AHEC initiatives, please email MidCentralAHEC@cmich.edu.

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