The Open Medical Education Journal

2013, 6 : 1-11
Published online 2013 April 05. DOI: 10.2174/1876519X01306010001
Publisher ID: TOMEDEDUJ-6-1

Administering a Rural Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship Across 5 US States

Jay S. Erickson , Thomas E. Norris and Douglas C. Schaad
UW School of Medicine, 525 Railway Street, Suite 204, Whitefish, Montana 59937.

ABSTRACT

This article illustrates the administrative structure that has evolved to support a multistate longitudinal inte-grated clinical clerkship (LICC) experience. In 1996 the University of Washington School of Medicine created the WWAMI Rural Integrated Training Experience (WRITE), a five-month rural continuity based LICC experience. WRITE students spend five months in a rural immersion experience with a primary care preceptor. During this time students form continuity based relationships with patients and preceptors, which allows students to develop skills and knowledge re-quired to treat the broad range of medical, surgical, and psychosocial problems found in rural communities.

Administration of 21 rural sites across five states is based on a strong partnership between rural practice sites, regional clinical deans’offices, and the departments and dean’s office in an academic medical center.We explore the key aspects of the multi-layered administration that has evolved to support the WRITE program. A review of the year-long calendar of the WRITE program illustrates the complexity, detail and components necessary for the administration of this successful program.Rural LICC experiences like WRITE offer a useful approach to meeting rural physician workforce needs. A brief review of the WRITE outcome data will be explored. Administration of a multistate LICC experience requires synchroni-zation of many components, especially a strong regional administrative presence that connects the rural practice sites with the academic medical center.

Keywords:

Rural, Medical Education, Administration, Community Engagement.