UHE track

Overview

The Penn Internal Medicine Residency Urban Health Equity Track is a two-year training pathway designed for residents interested in dedicating their careers to health equity leadership. Key components of the curriculum include participation in a 2-week summer educational intensive, development and implementation of a capstone health equity project in partnership with a community organization, and engagement with community-based clinical sites. Applications will be reviewed during the winter of the PGY-1 year.

Track Goals

  • Increase exposure to and comfort with urban health equity topics through a series of lectures and experiential learning sessions
    • Example topics: Healthcare and Incarceration, LGBTQ+ Health Disparities, Environmental Justic, Trauma-Informed Care, Immigrant and Refugee Care, Anti-Ableism in Medicine, Health Services/Disparities Research, Legislative Advocacy for Physicians
  • Equip trainees to serve as leaders in health equity-focused careers within the realms of medical education, health services research, community-based clinical care, healthcare administration, or policymaking
  • Establish meaningful and sustainable relationships with local community partner agencies in West Philadelphia

Track Requirements

All Urban Health Track residents will be expected to:

  • Attend all didactic and experiential sessions during the summer 2-week intensive course
  • Identify a health equity focus area and develop a corresponding capstone community engagement, health disparities research, and/or legislative advocacy project over the course of two years
  • Participate in once-monthly evening sessions (journal club, group volunteering, “work in progress” discussions) as clinical schedules allow
  • Work at a community-based health center for a clinical or quality improvement-focused half day at least once per outpatient and elective block
  • Disseminate findings and deliverables from the capstone project experience at a regional or national meeting, as well as during the final year of residency in an “Urban Health Report” noon conference session
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