The AHA Sept. 24 expressed support for the Medical Student Education Authorization Act (H.R. 5428), legislation introduced in the House Sept. 17 that would authorize a federal program to award grants to public institutes of higher education to expand or support graduate education for physicians. It particularly focuses on states with the most severe primary care provider shortages.   
 
“Hospitals face ongoing, significant challenges sustaining, building and retaining the health care workforce,” the AHA said in a letter to the bill’s sponsors, Reps. Tom Cole, R-Okla., and Dina Titus, D-Nev. “Our nation simply does not have enough clinicians to care for patients today and too few in the training pipeline for the future.” 

Headline
The AHA will host a webinar March 19 at 1 p.m. ET that will explore how leaders are improving retention, physician well-being and coverage…
Perspective
Public
A hospital patient from the 1990s would likely marvel at the pace of progress in health care just a generation later. America’s hospitals and health systems…
Headline
Jeremy Fish, M.D., director of the Family Medicine Residency Program at John Muir Health, and Pilar Corcoran-Lozano, behavioral health corps faculty and…
Headline
The Departments of Health and Human Services and Education March 5 announced a new initiative to increase nutrition education in medical schools beginning this…
Headline
The AHA commented Feb. 25 on the Department of Education’s proposed rule that would define the terms “graduate student” and “professional student” for…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Feb. 23 announced the development of its Medicare App Library. As part of the agency’s Health Technology…