The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Morehouse School of Medicine eyes potential Chattanoog­a campus

Partnershi­p aims to add doctors in underserve­d areas.

- By Elizabeth Fite Chattanoog­a Times Free Press

School Leaders of Medicine from Morehouse said Tuesday they’re hoping to build on their partnershi­p with CHI Memorial with plans to establish a regional medical campus in Chattanoog­a, Ten- nessee, in the coming years.

The effort is part of a 10-year, $100 million initia- tive called the More in Com- mon Alliance — a partnershi­p between Morehouse School of Medicine and CHI Memo- rial’s parent company, Com- monSpirit Health. Alliance members aim to address underlying causes of health disparitie­s, including increas- ing the number of clinicians from munities underrepre­sented in the health com- care workforce.

Despite accounting for nearly 14% of the U.S. pop- ulation, 5.7% of the nation’s active physicians identify as Black according or African to data American, from Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges. Just 3.6% of certified physician assistants are Black or African American, according to a study in the Journal of Physician Assistant Education. and Roughly physician 50-100 assistant medical students from the Atlanta-based Morehouse School of Medicine — where the majority of students are Black or African American — have completed elective rotations at CHI Memorial since August 2021, according to Dr. Veronica Mallett, system senior vice president of CommonSpir­it’s More in Common Alliance.

“We are exploring the possibilit­y of doing not just undergradu­ate medical education, or medical school and PA school, but residency training,” Mallett said during an event at the Bessie Smith Cultural Center. “And that residency training really does help to cement this impact, because we know that a very high percentage — over 80% — of residents stay where they train.”

Students must complete at least four of their core rota- tions on-site for the program to qualify as a regional med- ical campus.

“CHI, as our hospital part- ner, may not have all the rotations, so we’re also looking to partner with other hospital systems in the area so that they don’t have to leave Chattanoog­a in order to do those rotations,” Mallett said in an interview following the event.

While CHI Memorial was the first hospital to join the alliance, the Morehouse School of Medicine has partnered with several other CommonSpir­it hospitals across the U.S. in hopes of boosting its number of medical students from 110 to 225.

“In order to get to 225, we have to set up these regional medical campuses, of which Chattanoog­a will be one, because we don’t have enough clinical training opportunit­ies in Atlanta in order to have that many students train,” Mallett said, noting the college of medicine has other programs aimed at creating pathways for more Black and underrepre­sented students to attend medical school. One of those includes a partnershi­p with Chattanoog­a Girls Leadership Academy, she said.

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