Lake County Record-Bee

COVID-19 reveals need to increase diversity among California physicians

- By Janet Coffman and Alicia Fernández

COVID-19 has revealed serious flaws in our health system, but none is more distressin­g than the deep racial and ethnic inequality exposed by the pandemic.

With Latinx and Black people dying at higher rates than the rest of the population, communitie­s of color are much more likely than other groups to say they’re having trouble accessing telehealth services and paying medical bills.

In a January poll from the California Health Care Foundation, fully half of California­ns say they believe it is harder for Black and Latinx people to get the health care they need when they are sick. And while there is only limited data on who’s getting the vaccine, the early numbers are raising concerns that Black and Latinx communitie­s will once again fall to the back of the line.

There is no easy solution to these problems. But the evidence shows the need for at least one urgent response: Doing everything we can to create a health care system — and a physician workforce in particular — that looks a lot more like the people it serves.

One good place to start is at the very beginning, with California’s medical schools.

There is ample research showing Latinx and Black physicians are more likely to care for underserve­d patients, more likely to elicit trust from minority patients, and that Spanish-speaking patients are more likely to have better clinical outcomes when Spanish-speaking physicians help them manage complex diseases. The evidence additional­ly shows diverse medical school environmen­ts help all students learn — and improve graduates’ ability to treat diverse patient population­s.

When it comes to diversity, though, California’s current physician workforce has a long way to go: Latinx make up almost 40% of the state’s population, but are only 7% of the state’s physicians. More than 6% of California­ns are Black, compared to only 3% of the state’s physicians.

These are huge shortfalls that will take time to close. Further complicati­ng matters: California­ns have voted against relying on affirmativ­e action to address these issues — first with the passage of Propositio­n 209 in 1996 and again last fall with the rejection of Propositio­n 16.

The good news is we’ve learned a lot over the last two decades about other ways to build the health system California needs. Now is the time to reinforce those strategies.

We published a new report this winter exploring long-term trends in state medical school enrollment and found the racial and ethnic diversity of California medical school students has largely recovered from sharp declines after Propositio­n 209 — thanks to a variety of successful initiative­s that focus on preparing, admitting and training students committed to caring for California’s underserve­d patient population­s.

The percentage of Latinx students in California medical schools fell from 15% to less than 10% of matriculan­ts in the years following Propositio­n 209 — with Black students dropping to 5% of matriculan­ts. But these numbers started to rise again in the 2000s, with enrollment in public medical schools climbing to 17% Latinx and 11% Black by 2019. Ironically, despite Propositio­n 209, public medical schools have made much more progress than private medical schools toward increasing the number of Latinx and Black students.

One of the most successful initiative­s we tracked is the UC Programs in Medical Education (UC PRIME), which combines targeted recruitmen­t with additional training to help graduates meet the needs of underserve­d population­s. In the four years after the program was launched at UC Irvine in 2004, the number of Latinx students at UC medical schools jumped by 21%, while the number of Black students climbed 25%.

The blue-ribbon 2019 California Future Health Workforce Commission put a 10-year price tag on some of the most promising investment­s — from expanding advising and mentorship programs for low-income college students ($159 million) to funding post-baccalaure­ate training programs for people from disadvanta­ged background­s ($26 million).

These numbers shouldn’t shock us. Instead, they should give us hope, that even in the midst of a pandemic that has exposed serious flaws in so many of our institutio­ns, we can build a health system that works for all California­ns — and looks like them too.

Janet Coffman is a professor of health policy at the Healthforc­e Center at the University of California, San Francisco, Janet.Coffman@ucsf.edu. Dr. Alicia Fernández is a professor of medicine and director of the University of California, San Francisco, Latinx Center of Excellence, Alicia.Fernandez@ucsf.edu.

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