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INFORMATION FOR

    “Impact of the Current Landscape on GME Nationwide”

    March 26, 2026

    Benjamin Mba, MBBS, MRCP (UK), CHCQM, FACP - Yale School of Medicine

    March 26, 2026

    Yale GIM “Educational Strategies & Faculty Development” Meeting Presented by: Yale School of Medicine’s Department of Internal Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine

    ID
    14005

    Transcript

    • 03:33Okay. Let's try this one.
    • 03:34Can you hear online?
    • 03:38Yes.
    • 03:39Okay.
    • 03:41Well, it always it always
    • 03:43helps when you click the
    • 03:44audio button on the on
    • 03:45the Zoom.
    • 03:47In any case,
    • 03:49the slides were good, so
    • 03:50I hope you understand what
    • 03:51I was talking about earlier.
    • 03:52Again, congratulations
    • 03:53to the eighteen GIM faculty
    • 03:55who were identified by the
    • 03:57graduating students as impactful.
    • 04:00That's a big number.
    • 04:01So I will now pass
    • 04:03the microphone over to your
    • 04:04vice chief for education, Jeanette
    • 04:06Tetreault. Jeanette.
    • 04:09Thank you.
    • 04:10One other announcement I just
    • 04:12wanted to mention.
    • 04:14If you have
    • 04:16a presentation
    • 04:17coming up for a spring
    • 04:18meeting that you would like
    • 04:19to practice,
    • 04:21for SGIM or other spring
    • 04:23meetings,
    • 04:24please let us know. We're
    • 04:25gonna make space for that.
    • 04:26You can it's okay to
    • 04:28email you, Michelle, with that
    • 04:29information.
    • 04:30So, just wanted to put
    • 04:32that out there. So I'm
    • 04:33delighted to introduce doctor Mba,
    • 04:36who is our,
    • 04:38graduate medical education director for
    • 04:40collaborative excellence here at Yale
    • 04:42and our associate,
    • 04:44designated institutional
    • 04:45official
    • 04:46really, really,
    • 04:48changed the landscape of our
    • 04:50GME training with being thoughtful
    • 04:52around recruitment, retention,
    • 04:55and sustainability,
    • 04:57for our house staff and
    • 04:59faculty as well.
    • 05:00So, doctor Imba trained in
    • 05:02Nigeria and then completed a
    • 05:04medicine residency in the UK,
    • 05:07before coming to the US
    • 05:09to do, an additional residency
    • 05:11at Cook County Hospital where
    • 05:12he served as chief medical
    • 05:13resident and then spent, time
    • 05:15on faculty,
    • 05:18as the, associate chair of
    • 05:19medicine for faculty development in
    • 05:21the department of medicine.
    • 05:23We were lucky enough to
    • 05:24recruit him in twenty twenty
    • 05:26three,
    • 05:27here and he has really,
    • 05:28really,
    • 05:30made profound
    • 05:31impact in the way we
    • 05:32think about,
    • 05:34measuring and,
    • 05:37you know, following our faculty
    • 05:39and what they're doing here
    • 05:41at Yale School of Medicine
    • 05:42and how we how we
    • 05:43retain them. He has won
    • 05:44numerous awards. The most recent
    • 05:46was the ace at the
    • 05:47ACP,
    • 05:48national meeting where he received,
    • 05:51an award for diversity, equity,
    • 05:52and inclusion.
    • 05:54So in the interest of
    • 05:55time, I'm going to ask
    • 05:56him to come on up.
    • 05:58I asked him to come
    • 05:59and talk about the impact
    • 06:00of the kinda current landscape,
    • 06:03both politically and and just
    • 06:05in general
    • 06:06on GME training nationwide. So
    • 06:08doctor Imba, thank you so
    • 06:10much.
    • 06:13Thank you very much for
    • 06:14the introduction.
    • 06:16And,
    • 06:18just one more announcement. If
    • 06:20you haven't voted for the
    • 06:21SGIM
    • 06:22president, is this still open?
    • 06:24Oh, sorry. It is still
    • 06:26open.
    • 06:28Oh,
    • 06:29that was closed yesterday. Closed
    • 06:31yesterday. Oh. So, hopefully, you
    • 06:33got your vote. Yes. I
    • 06:34did hope. Yeah. It's fine.
    • 06:35Well, I tried factoring.
    • 06:40Good luck.
    • 06:46You should be all set,
    • 06:47I think. But,
    • 06:49Yeah.
    • 06:50Everything we like. Yeah. Okay.
    • 06:52Ace. Cool. Good.
    • 06:57Okay.
    • 06:58Okay. Thank you. So if
    • 07:00you so I'm gonna talk
    • 07:01about the impact of the,
    • 07:03current landscape on the g
    • 07:05m on GME nationwide, and
    • 07:06it's going to be from
    • 07:08a lens,
    • 07:09mostly from a lens of
    • 07:10the collaborative
    • 07:11excellence space, inclusion space, belonging
    • 07:14space, and,
    • 07:16impact on international medical graduates.
    • 07:22Oh,
    • 07:23this one.
    • 07:26Oops.
    • 07:30Okay.
    • 07:31So
    • 07:32this presentation does not present
    • 07:35legal advice.
    • 07:37I have no financial,
    • 07:38conflicts of interest,
    • 07:40and the views are are
    • 07:41mine mostly.
    • 07:43And so
    • 07:45I think to talk about
    • 07:47the impact,
    • 07:49on GME, I think really
    • 07:51the in the timeline should
    • 07:52start from the SCOTUS decision,
    • 07:55which was in, June o
    • 07:57three twenty three.
    • 07:59Then in in January,
    • 08:01we had the DEI executive
    • 08:03orders.
    • 08:05Then in April, we had
    • 08:06the executive orders aimed at
    • 08:08accreditation bodies.
    • 08:10Then in June, we had
    • 08:11travel bans.
    • 08:13Then in July, we had
    • 08:14the DOJ guidance on illegal
    • 08:17immigration.
    • 08:18And then in September, we
    • 08:20had the executive order on
    • 08:21h one b visas. And
    • 08:23then the in August, we
    • 08:24had the new proposals for
    • 08:25the j one status,
    • 08:27to be modified.
    • 08:30And all along, we've had
    • 08:31federal funding via federal funding
    • 08:34cuts via multiple ongoing modalities.
    • 08:38In January of twenty
    • 08:40December of the twenty five,
    • 08:42we had the extension of
    • 08:43the travel ban to hit
    • 08:44now seventy five or seventy
    • 08:45six countries.
    • 08:47And I'll end with the
    • 08:48impact on the current match
    • 08:49which we just concluded.
    • 08:52And, obviously, to note that
    • 08:53the ink is not dry
    • 08:54yet on this timeline because,
    • 08:56anything can happen.
    • 08:59So let's start with the
    • 09:00SCOTUS decision.
    • 09:01The SCOTUS decision was
    • 09:04June twenty three and, basically,
    • 09:08terminated
    • 09:10affirmative actions,
    • 09:12ability to consider race as
    • 09:13one of multiple factuals, factors
    • 09:16for admission.
    • 09:17And just to read to
    • 09:19quote chief justice Roberts, many
    • 09:20universities have for too long
    • 09:22concluded wrongly that the touchstone
    • 09:24of an individual's identity
    • 09:26is not challenges bested, skills
    • 09:28built, or lessons learned, but
    • 09:30the color of their skin.
    • 09:31Our constitutional history does not
    • 09:33tolerate that choice.
    • 09:35He did note that nothing
    • 09:36in his opinion should be
    • 09:37construed as prohibiting universities from
    • 09:39considering an applicant's discussion of
    • 09:41how race affected or affects
    • 09:43his or her life. And
    • 09:44so this was limited to
    • 09:46college admissions. This was not
    • 09:47really in the GME space.
    • 09:49Specifically, there was no comment
    • 09:50on this,
    • 09:52decision on outreach, affinity groups,
    • 09:54scholarship, or retention programs.
    • 09:58So
    • 09:59what has been the impact
    • 10:00on this in terms of
    • 10:01admission? So for the first
    • 10:02the first set of data
    • 10:03we have for medical school
    • 10:05matriculants from twenty twenty four
    • 10:07to twenty twenty five shows
    • 10:09at, on the table,
    • 10:11If you go to the
    • 10:12right of your screen,
    • 10:15the the
    • 10:16the before the last
    • 10:18column, the last two columns
    • 10:19is twenty twenty three to
    • 10:20twenty four and twenty four
    • 10:21to twenty five. And what
    • 10:22you see is the percentage
    • 10:24change within the year following
    • 10:26the decision
    • 10:28with a twenty two percent
    • 10:29drop in in matriculants for
    • 10:31American Indians
    • 10:33and eleven
    • 10:34twelve percent drop for black
    • 10:36Americans,
    • 10:37about eleven for Hispanics, and
    • 10:39about four percent for, native
    • 10:41Hawaiians,
    • 10:42with about,
    • 10:45eight percent increase in,
    • 10:47in Asian Americans.
    • 10:49And so
    • 10:51this is yes. Go ahead.
    • 10:55Increase of percent of other
    • 10:57race and ethnicity. What do
    • 10:58you know what that represent?
    • 11:00So that usually that's represents
    • 11:02a combination of,
    • 11:05categories like,
    • 11:07Mina, which is a new
    • 11:08category, which I'll talk about,
    • 11:10Middle Eastern and North Africans.
    • 11:12And I I will show
    • 11:14for the first time, the
    • 11:15NRMP
    • 11:16has actually recorded the percentage,
    • 11:18and I'll show you that
    • 11:19in some slides. And some
    • 11:20will be, just unidentified races,
    • 11:23mixed races.
    • 11:25It's it's hard to get
    • 11:26into
    • 11:28deep layers when it says
    • 11:29other or or late races
    • 11:31like that.
    • 11:32And so this significant reduction,
    • 11:35if you look at it
    • 11:36this way, is concurrent with
    • 11:38actually an increase
    • 11:39in applicants
    • 11:41in for Hispanic or or
    • 11:43black
    • 11:45applicants, increase in applicants, reduction
    • 11:47in
    • 11:48matriculants.
    • 11:49And for Asian American Indians,
    • 11:51you have a significant drop
    • 11:52in applicant applicants and in
    • 11:54matriculants
    • 11:55as well. So this is
    • 11:56twenty twenty four. So just
    • 11:58think of it like matriculation
    • 12:00sets the tone for the
    • 12:01future. Right? For the health,
    • 12:03physician workforce in this case.
    • 12:05So at that same point
    • 12:07in time,
    • 12:08twenty twenty four, across all
    • 12:10trainees in GME,
    • 12:12this was the breakdown.
    • 12:14Right?
    • 12:14And what you can see
    • 12:16is that for the Hispanic
    • 12:17or Latino, Black or African
    • 12:19Americans, American Indians, Hawaiian native
    • 12:22or Pacific Islanders,
    • 12:24their numbers were actually back
    • 12:25to pre pandemic,
    • 12:28levels in terms of,
    • 12:31race or ethnicity of enrolled
    • 12:32students.
    • 12:33Of all the enrolled students
    • 12:35in the United States, one
    • 12:36point four percent are you
    • 12:38non US and non green
    • 12:40card holders.
    • 12:41So we have several of
    • 12:42those at Yale.
    • 12:44Now
    • 12:46so that's twenty twenty four.
    • 12:47But now we have two
    • 12:48years of data because we
    • 12:49have twenty twenty five.
    • 12:51So this, very colorful but
    • 12:53I can walk you through
    • 12:54it. Green on top is
    • 12:55twenty twenty four to twenty
    • 12:57five and twenty twenty five
    • 12:58to twenty six matriculants.
    • 13:00And you can see in
    • 13:02red the groups that the
    • 13:05the URM groups
    • 13:07have not had any significant
    • 13:09increase. And if you look
    • 13:11at black,
    • 13:12African American over the last
    • 13:13several years, you can see
    • 13:14there's been a significant drop.
    • 13:16Also a drop in Hispanics
    • 13:17since twenty twenty three. Again,
    • 13:19this is for medical school.
    • 13:21And at the bottom, you
    • 13:22can see that the total
    • 13:23URM,
    • 13:24component
    • 13:25across matriculants
    • 13:27has actually dropped almost by
    • 13:29four point five percent, something
    • 13:31like that. So these are
    • 13:32this is the pipeline that's
    • 13:34eventually going to lead into,
    • 13:36physicians and GME trainees and,
    • 13:38attendings, etcetera.
    • 13:40This is another way to
    • 13:41look at it,
    • 13:42if if you prefer graphs.
    • 13:44And so, basically,
    • 13:46all the
    • 13:48all of these
    • 13:51all these
    • 13:52the four colors represent the
    • 13:54URM the traditional URM groups
    • 13:56that that we
    • 13:57talk about.
    • 13:59Now
    • 14:02as of so that was
    • 14:03medical school.
    • 14:04That same year of all
    • 14:07the MD residents in training
    • 14:08in twenty twenty four, you
    • 14:10can see the breakdown,
    • 14:14and you find that
    • 14:16basically,
    • 14:17the matriculants
    • 14:19and the
    • 14:20almost matches
    • 14:22the UIM groups in training.
    • 14:23Nine percent for Latinos,
    • 14:25seven percent for black African
    • 14:27American, and the combination adds
    • 14:29up to, you know, something
    • 14:30like sixteen percent or or
    • 14:32so.
    • 14:33But interesting to start to
    • 14:34note that in twenty twenty
    • 14:36four, before a lot of
    • 14:37the executive orders,
    • 14:39twenty four percent of all
    • 14:40active residents or IMGs. And
    • 14:42that that actual number comes
    • 14:44to thirty nine thousand out
    • 14:45of a hundred and sixty
    • 14:47two thousand trainees in twenty
    • 14:49twenty four.
    • 14:51And then
    • 14:52visa holders,
    • 14:53non US citizens and non
    • 14:54green card holders constitute about
    • 14:56seventeen percent.
    • 15:00So that's,
    • 15:01in a way, what we
    • 15:03can project from the scotus
    • 15:04effect in terms of
    • 15:06applicants,
    • 15:07matriculants
    • 15:08and then GME training.
    • 15:11So then,
    • 15:12let's now talk about so
    • 15:13that was the first impact.
    • 15:15Let's talk about the DEI
    • 15:17executive orders in January twenty
    • 15:19twenty five.
    • 15:21So the first order,
    • 15:23executive order was the ending
    • 15:25racial and wasteful government DI
    • 15:27program. So this is general
    • 15:29this is the order that
    • 15:30kind of terminated all DI
    • 15:32activities in federal agencies
    • 15:34under whatever name that they
    • 15:35may appear.
    • 15:37And this was on January
    • 15:38twentieth.
    • 15:40And on January twenty first
    • 15:41was the ending illegal discrimination
    • 15:43and restoring merit based opportunities.
    • 15:46This directed the attorney generals
    • 15:48and federal agencies to look
    • 15:50at the private sectors to
    • 15:53find those that
    • 15:55were conducting,
    • 15:56egregious
    • 15:58DEI programs and illegal DEI
    • 16:00programs without actually defining what
    • 16:02constituted
    • 16:03illegal DEI programs at that
    • 16:04point in time.
    • 16:08This,
    • 16:09this, I believe,
    • 16:12this order was challenged and
    • 16:14the government, I believe, dropped
    • 16:16the defense of this order
    • 16:18recently,
    • 16:19but not the DOJ guidance
    • 16:21which we'll get to.
    • 16:23So what impact has all
    • 16:25of this had? So executive
    • 16:26orders are not laws. They,
    • 16:29but they can lead to
    • 16:30a chilling effect. They can
    • 16:32lead to a cascade,
    • 16:34of compliance.
    • 16:38So this is updated as
    • 16:40of March twenty twenty six.
    • 16:42This is from the Chronicle
    • 16:43of Higher Education.
    • 16:44And this is a map
    • 16:45showing where anti DI legislation
    • 16:47has been proposed, either introduced,
    • 16:50final approval, or signed into
    • 16:52law.
    • 16:53And just just to summarize,
    • 16:55since twenty twenty three, a
    • 16:57hundred and fifty one, bills
    • 16:59have been introduced, thirty four
    • 17:00have had legislative
    • 17:02approval,
    • 17:03and thirty have become,
    • 17:05law.
    • 17:06And what does the law
    • 17:08what what does the legislation
    • 17:11represent? So this map shows
    • 17:13you, like, for these states,
    • 17:15you cannot have DEI offices
    • 17:17and staff.
    • 17:18For these states, you cannot
    • 17:19have mandatory DEI training.
    • 17:23You cannot have diversity statements,
    • 17:25and you cannot have identity
    • 17:27based preferences
    • 17:28for hiring.
    • 17:29So in effect, even though
    • 17:31one of the executive orders
    • 17:33was challenged and the government
    • 17:35has dropped
    • 17:36it has dropped its defense
    • 17:37of the of the challenge,
    • 17:39but nonetheless, numerous states have
    • 17:41passed anti DEI legislation
    • 17:44and all federal agencies have
    • 17:45ended their DEI programs
    • 17:47like the VA,
    • 17:49c CDC, NIH.
    • 17:52And numerous private academic centers
    • 17:54and university systems have also
    • 17:56dismantled their DEI programs.
    • 17:59For example,
    • 18:01this is just not an
    • 18:02ex for example, these schools
    • 18:04have abolished or
    • 18:06or suspended their DEI programs,
    • 18:10and there are many others.
    • 18:11And, of course, I'm sure
    • 18:12there are many more to
    • 18:13come.
    • 18:14To put this in perspective,
    • 18:17in general,
    • 18:20approximately actually, exactly, there are
    • 18:22one hundred and fifty nine
    • 18:23MD granting schools and there
    • 18:24are forty one dual granting
    • 18:26schools in the United States.
    • 18:27And roughly, there are about
    • 18:28two hundred and thirty academic
    • 18:30medical centers affiliated with training
    • 18:32or course.
    • 18:33And so
    • 18:35what has been the impact
    • 18:36of the executive orders?
    • 18:39Does anyone know this,
    • 18:41organization?
    • 18:43So do no harm is,
    • 18:45to protect health care from
    • 18:46the disastrous consequences of identity
    • 18:49politics.
    • 18:50And of September,
    • 18:52twenty twenty five,
    • 18:54they
    • 18:56had quoted that they had
    • 18:57whittled down DEI activities
    • 18:59down to
    • 19:00sixty six medical schools of
    • 19:02out of the close to
    • 19:03two hundred,
    • 19:05including those that have rebranded.
    • 19:07And for Yale,
    • 19:08Yale is on the list
    • 19:10as collaborative excellence
    • 19:12clearly stating that that
    • 19:14is
    • 19:16represents what the DEI office
    • 19:18was. In fact, the names
    • 19:19of our our leaders are
    • 19:20there in both categories.
    • 19:23Now in September that year,
    • 19:25this organization also established
    • 19:27the Center for Accountability
    • 19:29in Medicine,
    • 19:31and they came up with
    • 19:32a medical school excellence index.
    • 19:35And all the medical schools
    • 19:36have a so you have
    • 19:37the QR code if you're
    • 19:38interested. You wanna look at
    • 19:40all the schools. But I
    • 19:41just pulled up our, Yale
    • 19:42School of Medicine, and you
    • 19:43can see that, there's an
    • 19:45a to f ranking that
    • 19:46based on this,
    • 19:48medical school excellence index that
    • 19:49we have a c. And,
    • 19:50of course, the more
    • 19:53if you have a pass
    • 19:54or fail,
    • 19:55you're, you know, you're going
    • 19:56and you go towards the
    • 19:57f. If you have
    • 19:59any
    • 20:00I did
    • 20:01possible DI office, you go
    • 20:03towards the f. And if
    • 20:04you have honor systems and
    • 20:05grading, you go towards the
    • 20:06AOA, you go towards the
    • 20:08a.
    • 20:11So
    • 20:11so all of that so
    • 20:13this is just to show
    • 20:14that the the kind of
    • 20:15the
    • 20:16the movement or the landscape
    • 20:17or or or the forces
    • 20:19that are impacting
    • 20:22inclusion and belonging, I think,
    • 20:24in in medicine and GME.
    • 20:27So then we move along
    • 20:28to April twenty twenty five
    • 20:30when some executive orders targeted
    • 20:32the accreditation bodies. And, of
    • 20:34course, you we're all aware
    • 20:35that the LCME
    • 20:37in May dropped its requirement
    • 20:39element three point three, which
    • 20:41was of which,
    • 20:42mandated
    • 20:43diverse faculty, diverse trainees, etcetera.
    • 20:47And
    • 20:49just recently, I think in
    • 20:50February, the LCME has also
    • 20:52withdrawn requirements to teach cultural
    • 20:54competence in medical school.
    • 20:56The WMC no longer has
    • 20:57a chief diversity officer.
    • 20:59And then finally,
    • 21:01the ACGME, which is the
    • 21:02accreditation body for GME,
    • 21:05has retired its diversity, equity,
    • 21:07and inclusion
    • 21:08specific accreditation,
    • 21:10and anyone that had citations
    • 21:11were dropped instantly
    • 21:13and actually closed this department
    • 21:14of DEI completely.
    • 21:17So there's no accreditation
    • 21:20cover or incentive
    • 21:21or motivation
    • 21:23to
    • 21:24be inclusive, expansive, and etcetera.
    • 21:29So now let's go to
    • 21:30the travel bans.
    • 21:36This list of, I think,
    • 21:37twenty countries have a full
    • 21:39ban
    • 21:40suspended for immigrant and all
    • 21:42nonimmigrant
    • 21:43visas. Right?
    • 21:45So you may think of
    • 21:46it as, okay. Our trainees
    • 21:48are not coming from these
    • 21:49countries
    • 21:50of etcetera.
    • 21:51But that means that anyone
    • 21:53who is in the United
    • 21:54States professional
    • 21:56in any help any professional
    • 21:58capacity, for instance, who is
    • 21:59from these countries
    • 22:01and who who came here
    • 22:02ahead of their spouse or
    • 22:04their significant other or their
    • 22:06children or their parents
    • 22:08cannot
    • 22:10go home
    • 22:11and cannot
    • 22:12be joined
    • 22:14by
    • 22:15their family.
    • 22:16Open ended. I mean, so
    • 22:18think about the the the
    • 22:19the the the emotional
    • 22:21aspects, the mental drain, the
    • 22:23the
    • 22:24the stress that this,
    • 22:26impacts on it. So
    • 22:28then
    • 22:30there's a second group with
    • 22:32the partial ban,
    • 22:33which includes,
    • 22:36for immigrant, b one visas,
    • 22:38f m, and most importantly
    • 22:40for us in the GME
    • 22:41space, j visas. Right?
    • 22:44And if you look at
    • 22:45that list,
    • 22:47not because I'm from Nigeria,
    • 22:48but Nigeria is one of
    • 22:50the biggest suppliers
    • 22:51of trainees,
    • 22:53and I'll show you a
    • 22:53list later on. And so
    • 22:55you can imagine
    • 22:58and I I'm sure that's
    • 22:59not the case here, but
    • 23:00I'm sure across the country,
    • 23:02program directors
    • 23:03were
    • 23:04navigating their rank list accordingly.
    • 23:07Right?
    • 23:08A program that usually takes
    • 23:10maybe three or four Nigerians
    • 23:12would not
    • 23:14take that risk anymore because
    • 23:15they they may not get
    • 23:16the j one visa. There
    • 23:17are no exemptions at the
    • 23:18government level.
    • 23:21So again and all these
    • 23:22partial bans also impact spouses
    • 23:24and families, etcetera.
    • 23:26I'm sure Mark has residents
    • 23:27that haven't been home for
    • 23:28four or five years and
    • 23:30missed major family events.
    • 23:33So then let's talk about
    • 23:34the so so the impact.
    • 23:36So we talked about j
    • 23:37one. So the j one
    • 23:38is a very important for
    • 23:39GME.
    • 23:41In twenty twenty four, there
    • 23:42were about sixteen thousand physicians
    • 23:44in the US
    • 23:45GME on j one visas.
    • 23:47Right? And you can see
    • 23:48the list of countries
    • 23:50where Nigeria is the sixth.
    • 23:51So Nigeria usually supplies about
    • 23:53four hundred and fifty
    • 23:55to five hundred physicians annually.
    • 23:57And you can see so
    • 23:58Nigeria is the only one
    • 23:59on that top ten list
    • 24:00that has been affected
    • 24:02by the ban, the partial
    • 24:04ban.
    • 24:05Now where do these j
    • 24:06one physicians go?
    • 24:09They actually
    • 24:10New York has the highest
    • 24:12number,
    • 24:13and but you can see
    • 24:14Connecticut is in the top
    • 24:15ten as well.
    • 24:17And, of course, understanding that
    • 24:19this j one
    • 24:20physicians after they complete training
    • 24:23form the significant number of
    • 24:25physicians in underserved areas because
    • 24:28of their j one waivers.
    • 24:29So an impact again in
    • 24:31rural health care.
    • 24:34What specialties
    • 24:36really
    • 24:37depend on j one visas
    • 24:39for GME trainees? And you
    • 24:40can see that we are
    • 24:42the majority
    • 24:43internal medicine
    • 24:44by far.
    • 24:46And then we have pediatrics,
    • 24:47family medicine, neurology.
    • 24:52Now later on,
    • 24:54in January came, an increased
    • 24:57ban. This was what we're
    • 24:59leading up to the match.
    • 25:00But this time, a ban
    • 25:01on immigrant visas. So in
    • 25:03addition to those,
    • 25:05forty countries I listed, we
    • 25:07are now up to about
    • 25:08seventy six countries
    • 25:10that have a ban or
    • 25:12pause that if people trainees
    • 25:14here have spouses or significant
    • 25:16orders there,
    • 25:18there's no hope of them
    • 25:19coming.
    • 25:21My neighbor actually
    • 25:22was from
    • 25:24is from Iran, and my
    • 25:25neighbor's mom actually had an
    • 25:27interview
    • 25:28scheduled for
    • 25:30the end of January
    • 25:31in
    • 25:32in in in Turkey to
    • 25:34get the green card, and
    • 25:35now that's completely
    • 25:37suspended.
    • 25:42Okay.
    • 25:43So I'm sorry. It's all
    • 25:44a little bit doom and
    • 25:45gloom, but
    • 25:46but it's just to illustrate
    • 25:47the impact, it's having.
    • 25:49So then in July, we
    • 25:50had the finally, the DOJ
    • 25:53gave guidance. Yes, Andre.
    • 25:55Once people were here on
    • 25:57the j one,
    • 25:58you're saying they're allowed to
    • 26:00stay as long as they
    • 26:01Correct. Yes.
    • 26:02If you're on a j
    • 26:03one, I'll get to h
    • 26:04one. But if you're on
    • 26:04a j one,
    • 26:06you can stay.
    • 26:08But the new j ones,
    • 26:10like, if you match and
    • 26:11you have a new j
    • 26:12one coming from your country,
    • 26:14if you're under the ban,
    • 26:15that's a no that's a
    • 26:17no go.
    • 26:18And if they're here and
    • 26:19they finish their training, are
    • 26:20they able to serve in
    • 26:21those rural areas under that
    • 26:23j one that would Yes.
    • 26:24Correct. They can stay if
    • 26:25they're in here.
    • 26:27But the less that come
    • 26:29in,
    • 26:31eventually, it just adds to
    • 26:33the shortage.
    • 26:34I mean, it's easy to
    • 26:35see without a significant change
    • 26:38right from matriculation
    • 26:39and GME training.
    • 26:41So now a lot of
    • 26:42these countries are so so
    • 26:44now Brazil,
    • 26:45we have a lot of
    • 26:46professionals from Brazil, especially in
    • 26:48Connecticut, actually. There's a large
    • 26:49Brazilian population.
    • 26:51Brazil is now under this.
    • 26:52Russia is now under this.
    • 26:54Right?
    • 26:55So it has been expanded,
    • 26:56for immigrant visas.
    • 27:01Okay.
    • 27:02So the DOJ so what
    • 27:04what what was that illegal
    • 27:06DI activity? Even though the
    • 27:08government's is no longer defending
    • 27:09the executive order, but the
    • 27:11DOJ guidance still stands.
    • 27:13And what it is, the
    • 27:14DOJ has defined four categories
    • 27:16of what they would consider
    • 27:18unlawful discrimination.
    • 27:20One is preferential treatment,
    • 27:22granting opportunities
    • 27:23based on race, gender,
    • 27:25in any way that disadvantages
    • 27:27others.
    • 27:28So we have the swim
    • 27:30group here. We have several
    • 27:31groups in across universities.
    • 27:34Also, use of proxies.
    • 27:36And if you read through
    • 27:38it, it says,
    • 27:39use of, for instance,
    • 27:42schools
    • 27:43or geographical areas or ZIP
    • 27:45codes,
    • 27:46it with with the intention
    • 27:48of being a proxy. So,
    • 27:49I mean, that would be
    • 27:50a legal threshold to cross,
    • 27:52but, potentially,
    • 27:54you could be it could
    • 27:55be said, why are you
    • 27:56going to that district for
    • 27:58outreach? Or why are you
    • 27:59going to Puerto Rico for
    • 28:01outreach? Right?
    • 28:03For an example.
    • 28:05Segregation,
    • 28:06having activities or resources like,
    • 28:09several
    • 28:10undergraduate programs, and I don't
    • 28:11I'm not sure if Yale
    • 28:12does have, but some some
    • 28:14undergraduate programs actually have residences
    • 28:17where people live and study,
    • 28:19based on on certain characteristics.
    • 28:22And then, any kind of
    • 28:24DEI training program that creates
    • 28:26a hostile environment for any
    • 28:28individual
    • 28:29within the,
    • 28:31in the audience.
    • 28:32So then this had me
    • 28:34thinking, what about the HBCU
    • 28:37schools?
    • 28:38Right? These are schools that
    • 28:41are officially, the whole mission
    • 28:42is based upon an identity
    • 28:44or a culture. So
    • 28:48They are referred to as
    • 28:49minority serving institutions,
    • 28:51right? And there are two
    • 28:52broad categories. There's the mission
    • 28:54based, which is the HBCUs,
    • 28:57the tribally controlled colleges,
    • 28:59and they are then they
    • 29:00are enrollment based. So mission
    • 29:03based, this is your mission.
    • 29:05Enrollment based means that we
    • 29:07tend to recruit and retain
    • 29:08a significant number of minorities
    • 29:10in our university or colleges
    • 29:13so much so that in
    • 29:13the past, you could be
    • 29:15called a
    • 29:17a a Hispanic Hispanic center
    • 29:18of excellence if you had
    • 29:19more than about, I think,
    • 29:21nine or eight percent of
    • 29:22your enrollees over the last
    • 29:24several years
    • 29:25identify as Hispanic.
    • 29:27So all of those those
    • 29:29are enrollment based.
    • 29:31And what's happened is that
    • 29:32the Department of Education
    • 29:35ended discretionary funding to the
    • 29:37enrollment based programs that predominantly
    • 29:40support
    • 29:41community colleges or colleges that
    • 29:43have high Hispanic populations or
    • 29:45black populations.
    • 29:47They ended a lot of
    • 29:48discretionary funding.
    • 29:49But instead,
    • 29:51they channeled five hundred million
    • 29:54to the mission based school.
    • 29:55So it's kind of
    • 29:57I think it's just kind
    • 29:58of
    • 30:00zero sum game. In the
    • 30:01end, net zero,
    • 30:03because you're not you're withdrawing
    • 30:05support from not all minorities
    • 30:07can get into or can
    • 30:09be served by mission based,
    • 30:11institutions.
    • 30:14So now let's go to
    • 30:15the h one b visas
    • 30:16and the j one status
    • 30:18approval.
    • 30:19So we'll start with the
    • 30:20j one.
    • 30:21Just a brief introduction. So
    • 30:23the j one visa is
    • 30:24a training visa,
    • 30:26and it means that you
    • 30:27go train and you're going
    • 30:28to go back home to
    • 30:29your home country or you're
    • 30:31going to go to an
    • 30:33underserved area in the United
    • 30:35States for a period of
    • 30:37three years, convert to a
    • 30:38h one b visa, and
    • 30:40end up with a green
    • 30:41card.
    • 30:42The bulk of,
    • 30:44trainees,
    • 30:45international medical graduates come from
    • 30:48come in on a j
    • 30:49one b visa.
    • 30:50So traditionally,
    • 30:52on a j one visa.
    • 30:53Traditionally, the j one visa
    • 30:55is,
    • 30:57is the duration of status,
    • 30:59which means in general, you
    • 31:01come in,
    • 31:03and it usually lasts up
    • 31:04to seven years. So let's
    • 31:05say you're coming as a
    • 31:06intern, you do your residency,
    • 31:07you do your chief residency,
    • 31:08and you do a two
    • 31:09year rheumatology
    • 31:10program. As long as you
    • 31:12are in training status,
    • 31:14your visa would follow you.
    • 31:16Right? So that was status
    • 31:17duration.
    • 31:19The proposal in August is
    • 31:20to switch that status duration
    • 31:23to a fixed four year
    • 31:24period.
    • 31:26The idea being that the
    • 31:27four years to get an
    • 31:28undergraduate degree. So they fixed
    • 31:29the j one to four
    • 31:30years. And any extension of
    • 31:32that would need to be
    • 31:33filed by individuals directly to
    • 31:35USCIS,
    • 31:36which will include biometrics
    • 31:38and proof of financial resources,
    • 31:40etcetera.
    • 31:41So if this goes through,
    • 31:44going into
    • 31:47neurosurgery,
    • 31:48doing a fellowship,
    • 31:50going into a five year
    • 31:51program,
    • 31:52combined med piece and chief
    • 31:53residency, it makes it just
    • 31:55changes the whole pipeline.
    • 31:58Currently, the grace period when
    • 31:59you finish, you have up
    • 32:00to sixty days be it
    • 32:01to do your board exams
    • 32:02to wrap up your things.
    • 32:03The proposal is to drop
    • 32:04that to thirty days.
    • 32:06So they invited public comments,
    • 32:08and this they had over
    • 32:09twenty two thousand comments.
    • 32:11The final rule publication is
    • 32:13unknown. So currently, it's the
    • 32:14status quo.
    • 32:16This is still
    • 32:17pending final release. And just
    • 32:19as a reminder,
    • 32:21there are approximately sixteen thousand
    • 32:23physicians
    • 32:24in GME training on j
    • 32:25one b visas.
    • 32:26Part of the proposal because
    • 32:27people asked what will happen
    • 32:29to people who are currently
    • 32:30in the j one status.
    • 32:32And they said that
    • 32:34they they would end when
    • 32:36their current if it goes
    • 32:37through, when their current status
    • 32:39ends
    • 32:41or four years,
    • 32:43whichever is sooner.
    • 32:45Right? So
    • 32:46it would have an impact
    • 32:48retrospectively.
    • 32:49The proposal could, not it
    • 32:50would. It could have an
    • 32:51impact retrospectively.
    • 32:53And
    • 32:56just to give you context,
    • 32:57in the last ten years,
    • 32:59the United States
    • 33:01j one visa sponsorship has
    • 33:03increased by sixty seven percent
    • 33:06to meet the demands. And
    • 33:08and, of course, we know
    • 33:08that the j one physicians
    • 33:10go into the rural areas,
    • 33:12so that's the impact. So
    • 33:13that's the j one. Luckily,
    • 33:15the it it no final
    • 33:16decision has been made.
    • 33:19And in terms of Mark,
    • 33:20are you I mean, I
    • 33:21guess it's too soon. Are
    • 33:21you aware of any other
    • 33:23program director
    • 33:26that anyone that has succeeded
    • 33:27with
    • 33:28the,
    • 33:29exemption to the j one
    • 33:32bans? Like, I mean, maybe
    • 33:33too soon to like, if
    • 33:34someone match someone from Nigeria,
    • 33:37for instance.
    • 33:39I don't know. You know,
    • 33:40I I can tell you
    • 33:42to your point. We we
    • 33:43only had a small number
    • 33:45of international medical graduates who
    • 33:46residing outside the country.
    • 33:49Correct. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Alright.
    • 33:51Jeez. Actually, all the ones
    • 33:52who matched with us. I
    • 33:53intend yes. Not sure. I
    • 33:55I don't think that's the
    • 33:55case with other programs, though.
    • 33:57It's Yeah. I think for
    • 33:59community programs that aren't looking
    • 34:00at people doing postdocs.
    • 34:02Correct. Yes. Yeah.
    • 34:03Figuring. Yes. So and I
    • 34:05will talk about the impact
    • 34:06because, yes, places like Yale,
    • 34:08because you have there's a
    • 34:09whole postdoc problem, etcetera.
    • 34:10But community programs,
    • 34:12could have a hit.
    • 34:14Okay.
    • 34:15So the h one b,
    • 34:17this one, I think, has
    • 34:18literally neutralized
    • 34:20h one b visas for
    • 34:22this round of enrollment. Right?
    • 34:24New I'm sorry. New h
    • 34:25one b visas outside of
    • 34:27the country. Right? So as
    • 34:29we know, it's a hundred
    • 34:30grand for a new application
    • 34:31outside of the US.
    • 34:34And according to Department of
    • 34:35Labor, there are about eleven
    • 34:37thousand resident physicians
    • 34:39at any point in time
    • 34:39on h one b. And
    • 34:40a lot of them are
    • 34:41in the rural areas as
    • 34:42well because they got there
    • 34:43from the j one.
    • 34:45It's important to know that
    • 34:47this order does not affect
    • 34:48current h one holders in
    • 34:50the country,
    • 34:51and it does not affect
    • 34:52transfers
    • 34:53between employees. Right? So
    • 34:56there was there had been
    • 34:57a big hope that there
    • 34:58would be an exemption, but
    • 34:59so far there's been no
    • 35:00blanket exemptions for h one
    • 35:02b cap organizations,
    • 35:03research institutions, and health care.
    • 35:07So I can it's almost
    • 35:09I'm almost certain that there's
    • 35:10you can count under your
    • 35:11fingers the number of
    • 35:13new h one b visas
    • 35:14for GME training that has
    • 35:16that if there are any
    • 35:17at all for this cycle.
    • 35:20I I could comment on
    • 35:21that too. Yes.
    • 35:22We did have a couple
    • 35:23of applicants from non travel
    • 35:25ban countries who might have
    • 35:27been eligible
    • 35:28for h one b's in
    • 35:29the past, and we have
    • 35:31the same account. So Yes.
    • 35:32Australia,
    • 35:33they think it was somebody
    • 35:34from UK,
    • 35:36and it was simply because
    • 35:37they were outside the country,
    • 35:38and we couldn't
    • 35:39contemplate a hundred thousand dollars.
    • 35:41Yes. Thank you. In case
    • 35:42you didn't hear, Mark, it's
    • 35:43a very important point. So,
    • 35:48all this and so in
    • 35:49my training institution, I came
    • 35:50on a h one b.
    • 35:51H one b's used to
    • 35:52be offered. You could
    • 35:54get, pre match offers. You
    • 35:55could get
    • 35:58supposedly
    • 35:59more competitive candidates.
    • 36:01But now you can
    • 36:03still get countries
    • 36:04candidates from the non bank
    • 36:06countries, but they'll have to
    • 36:07accept the j one. And
    • 36:08I think almost every institution
    • 36:09and, yes, the GME did
    • 36:10put out guidance with full
    • 36:12transparency to the candidates that
    • 36:13if you match here, you're
    • 36:15gonna be prepared to accept
    • 36:17the j one, visa.
    • 36:19On average, what is the
    • 36:20loss About a thousand h
    • 36:22one b's enter the GME
    • 36:24annually,
    • 36:26estimatedly.
    • 36:27So that's lost.
    • 36:29They they will probably join
    • 36:30the j one category.
    • 36:32So federal cuts, multiple modalities,
    • 36:35this is extensive. We've all
    • 36:36heard about it. But in
    • 36:37terms of GME, it's important
    • 36:39to know that some of
    • 36:40the proposals,
    • 36:41I think they have gone
    • 36:42into law. The Medicaid
    • 36:44modifications
    • 36:45actually will impact indirect funding
    • 36:48for medical IME funding. Right?
    • 36:51Direct medical education funding was
    • 36:53captured in nineteen ninety six,
    • 36:55but the indirect funding
    • 36:57which,
    • 36:59re reimburses teaching hospitals a
    • 37:02little more on the assumption
    • 37:03that you're kind of slower
    • 37:04teaching students,
    • 37:06you're less efficient, you're looking
    • 37:07at more tests for training
    • 37:09purposes, etcetera,
    • 37:11that has been,
    • 37:13that could be impacted. There's
    • 37:15something called the provider tax,
    • 37:18which was thought to be
    • 37:19a loophole. Like, the state
    • 37:20of Connecticut would tax nursing
    • 37:22homes and would tax hospitals
    • 37:24about one point four percent
    • 37:26as an example
    • 37:28on paper, but use that
    • 37:29to draw down federal funds
    • 37:32and thereby put that back
    • 37:33to institutions by paying higher
    • 37:35Medicaid reimbursements.
    • 37:36I think that has been
    • 37:37cut off. And that is
    • 37:39set to constitute about eighteen
    • 37:40percent of Medicaid expenditure.
    • 37:44So,
    • 37:45just to end, like so
    • 37:46what has been the impact
    • 37:47on this current match,
    • 37:50twenty twenty six?
    • 37:52We I mean,
    • 37:53congratulations, Mark. You haven't had
    • 37:55any impact, but,
    • 37:57okay. So for this match,
    • 37:59twenty twenty six,
    • 38:01I think it's the highest
    • 38:02number so far. There
    • 38:03were fifty three thousand applicants.
    • 38:05There are forty eight active
    • 38:07applicants. Those that certified forty
    • 38:09eight thousand active applicants.
    • 38:11Forty four thousand residency positions
    • 38:14offered in over sixty eight
    • 38:15hundred programs across the United
    • 38:17States. So I have put
    • 38:18there the categories of, candidates,
    • 38:21the match rate, and the
    • 38:22change over last year.
    • 38:25For US MDs, there's been
    • 38:26no change. The match rate
    • 38:27is about ninety four percent.
    • 38:29That means that getting into
    • 38:31your one of your top,
    • 38:32I mean so that means
    • 38:33actually getting matching. There's a
    • 38:35different rate for getting into
    • 38:37your top three.
    • 38:38For US DOs, this has
    • 38:39been a strong match rate
    • 38:41that has actually equaled,
    • 38:45the US MD.
    • 38:47For the US international medical
    • 38:49graduates, that's most of the
    • 38:51Caribbean,
    • 38:52graduates,
    • 38:53significant jump
    • 38:55by five absolute points to
    • 38:57seventy percent.
    • 38:58And why? I think because
    • 39:02there's no visa issues.
    • 39:03Right?
    • 39:04So the loss for the
    • 39:07international medical graduates can be
    • 39:08covered by the US,
    • 39:10international medical graduates.
    • 39:12For non US citizen
    • 39:14international medical graduates, it's fifty
    • 39:16six point two percent.
    • 39:19But if you splice it,
    • 39:21if you look at the
    • 39:22foreign
    • 39:23born international medical graduate needing
    • 39:25a visa, it's at the
    • 39:27lowest ever at fifty four
    • 39:29percent,
    • 39:30which means
    • 39:32practically one in two applicants
    • 39:35would not
    • 39:36match, you know, and thousands
    • 39:38of dollars are spent on
    • 39:40this and so on. However,
    • 39:41if you're foreign born on
    • 39:42a green card, you're almost
    • 39:44seventy percent. So you can
    • 39:45see that
    • 39:46pro it I mean, program
    • 39:47directors are just are navigating
    • 39:49according to the the external
    • 39:51limitations.
    • 39:54Now does anyone know the
    • 39:56programs with the hundred percent
    • 39:58match rate?
    • 40:00Not individual programs, specialties. I'm
    • 40:02sorry.
    • 40:04Actually, I was surprised to
    • 40:06I don't know if I
    • 40:06was surprised. I was pleasantly
    • 40:08surprised to see that med
    • 40:09peds is a hundred percent
    • 40:10match rate actually. It's in
    • 40:11very high demand and it's
    • 40:13relevant to our department.
    • 40:16What happened this year
    • 40:18was as as predicted, there
    • 40:20were an ink there was
    • 40:21an increase in unfilled positions
    • 40:24by about three hundred and
    • 40:25ninety from two hundred and
    • 40:26twenty five.
    • 40:28For our interest, internal medicine
    • 40:30fill rate is ninety five
    • 40:31percent. That drops for two
    • 40:33percent from twenty twenty five.
    • 40:36Peds fill rate is ninety
    • 40:37four percent.
    • 40:38That dropped as well.
    • 40:40But family medicine fill rate
    • 40:42is actually
    • 40:43there's a big challenge there
    • 40:44at, eighty four percent. EM
    • 40:46has improved,
    • 40:48and psychiatry is doing very
    • 40:49well, and med ped is
    • 40:51actually at hundred percent.
    • 40:53So
    • 40:56with all of this, since
    • 40:57I have a role,
    • 40:58one as a as a
    • 41:00as a as a person
    • 41:01of color, as a minority,
    • 41:03a person of minority of
    • 41:05as a person of color
    • 41:06and an underrepresented,
    • 41:09belonging to an underrepresented,
    • 41:11category.
    • 41:12So what has been my
    • 41:13personal experience and reflection during
    • 41:14this period? So
    • 41:16I would describe my intermittent
    • 41:18emotions, feelings, and state of
    • 41:19mind. Not permanent, intermittent.
    • 41:22So
    • 41:23and see if you notice
    • 41:24a trend.
    • 41:26Days, darkness, derailed, deflated, depression,
    • 41:28deprioritized,
    • 41:29despair, desperation, despondency, devastated, devalued,
    • 41:32disgusted, disconfabulated,
    • 41:34discontent,
    • 41:35disappointed, disheartened, disillusioned, disoriented, dissuaded,
    • 41:39dissatisfaction,
    • 41:40distraught, doom.
    • 41:42What strikes you?
    • 41:45What is the common thread
    • 41:47across all of them?
    • 41:49D.
    • 41:50I never knew d. It
    • 41:51was such a devastating and
    • 41:53depressing and deflating letter.
    • 41:55So what I did is
    • 41:56I took I I sat
    • 41:57down and said I just
    • 41:58tried to articulate
    • 42:00various
    • 42:01states of mind, and I
    • 42:01thought I took it all
    • 42:03into
    • 42:04uncle chat,
    • 42:05and I said, take all
    • 42:07of these words
    • 42:09and create a picture
    • 42:11so that I could mirror
    • 42:11and look back on myself,
    • 42:14intermittently.
    • 42:15And this is what he
    • 42:17did. Quite, impressive, I thought.
    • 42:21And okay.
    • 42:23Nonetheless, the struggle must continue
    • 42:25because it will. And so
    • 42:27it however you define the
    • 42:28struggle, it will continue.
    • 42:31And none of this will
    • 42:31be easy, and it falls
    • 42:33on all of us, and
    • 42:34it does not seem fair,
    • 42:35but we must know that
    • 42:37no one is coming, and
    • 42:38it has never been fair
    • 42:39or just. And to paraphrase,
    • 42:41John Lewis
    • 42:43who paraphrased,
    • 42:47someone else who paraphrased someone
    • 42:48else. I tried to get
    • 42:49to the bottom of this,
    • 42:50but I think it was
    • 42:50actually
    • 42:52a
    • 42:53Hebrew scholar
    • 42:54many, many centuries ago that
    • 42:56said, if not us, then
    • 42:58who? If not now, then
    • 42:59when?
    • 43:01So what does the future
    • 43:02hold?
    • 43:03Institutional and political support is
    • 43:05crucial. Departmental
    • 43:06division section leadership is crucial.
    • 43:08Program leadership is crucial.
    • 43:10Funding is crucial. Advocacy by
    • 43:12local and political leaders, advocacy
    • 43:14by our organizations,
    • 43:16and perhaps, eventually, some advocacy
    • 43:18and pushback by ag accreditation
    • 43:20organizations.
    • 43:21For individuals in the in
    • 43:23in caught up in all
    • 43:24of this, sometime a self
    • 43:26care is essential. Sometimes you
    • 43:28simply have to step back.
    • 43:29I take a news fast
    • 43:30intermittently,
    • 43:32try to cultivate determination,
    • 43:35hope, courage, fortitude,
    • 43:37doggedness,
    • 43:38persistence,
    • 43:39steadfastness.
    • 43:40And I love this word,
    • 43:42indefatigability.
    • 43:45I just it just came
    • 43:47across. I just liked it.
    • 43:48And innovation and creative strategies
    • 43:50will be crucial. And so
    • 43:53the way forward, I took
    • 43:54this
    • 43:55these
    • 43:56same words back to uncle
    • 43:58chat,
    • 43:59and I said, uncle
    • 44:01Chad, look at this and
    • 44:02tell me what this look
    • 44:03like. And this is what
    • 44:04he came up with.
    • 44:07Hope in defragability
    • 44:08and resilience.
    • 44:09And I think, ultimately,
    • 44:11everywhere in society,
    • 44:13nationally, globally, really,
    • 44:16the only way out is
    • 44:17to find common ground.
    • 44:19Right? Our human values, things
    • 44:21we share together, and kind
    • 44:22of a a march to
    • 44:23the middle to meet to
    • 44:24meet ourselves.
    • 44:26What should GME still strive
    • 44:28for?
    • 44:30Currently, how do we define
    • 44:32success for GME training programs?
    • 44:34These are all very valid
    • 44:35metrics.
    • 44:36So excellent board pass rates,
    • 44:38of course, fellowship match rates,
    • 44:40top three choices,
    • 44:42academic jobs, large scholarly footprint,
    • 44:45prior achievements, superstars,
    • 44:47policymakers,
    • 44:49contribution to patient safety, equitable
    • 44:51health outcomes in the community.
    • 44:53So these are all excellent
    • 44:55parameters.
    • 44:58But I wanna go zoom
    • 44:59out and the ultimate health
    • 45:01care goal of GME,
    • 45:02ultimately,
    • 45:03if you break it down,
    • 45:04we're simply here to produce
    • 45:06future generations of physicians and
    • 45:08scientists
    • 45:08who will ensure the best
    • 45:10possible health care for the
    • 45:11entire US population.
    • 45:13And to attain this goal,
    • 45:14it's essential to train highly
    • 45:16competent physicians who reflect population's
    • 45:19diversity in all its forms.
    • 45:21And also,
    • 45:23such members, it's important that
    • 45:25clinical research and basic research
    • 45:27should represent diversity of the
    • 45:29country in all its forms.
    • 45:31And as leaders,
    • 45:33we all acknowledge talent is
    • 45:34universal.
    • 45:35We should strive for excellence
    • 45:37driven by different perspectives. It's
    • 45:39up to us to foster
    • 45:40a learning and collaborative environment
    • 45:42where everyone is respected,
    • 45:44feel psychologically safe, and can
    • 45:45give their highest value.
    • 45:47We want excellence driven by
    • 45:49diversity
    • 45:50to create a sum greater
    • 45:51than its components.
    • 45:53We should consider recruiting and
    • 45:54retaining faculty who can contribute
    • 45:57to this environment.
    • 45:58And I'd like to end
    • 45:59with this in October. It
    • 46:00came out just in time,
    • 46:02but can be used for
    • 46:03the next cycle.
    • 46:04The WMC came up with
    • 46:05this mission aligned selection and
    • 46:07retention
    • 46:08guideline.
    • 46:10And mission aligned selection is
    • 46:11a flexible evidence informed approach
    • 46:13to recruiting
    • 46:14and assessing an individual's competency
    • 46:17competencies by considering their
    • 46:20experiences, attributes, and metrics.
    • 46:22In order to select an
    • 46:23individual that is best suited
    • 46:25for your own program's
    • 46:27environment.
    • 46:29In other words, they recommend
    • 46:30establishing a program's mission
    • 46:33as the foundation for defining
    • 46:35merit
    • 46:36and identifying competencies,
    • 46:38attributes, and experiences that would
    • 46:40align with programmatic goals and
    • 46:42definitions.
    • 46:43So they recommend creating
    • 46:45proactively having,
    • 46:47your mission, institution, or program
    • 46:49as a foundation for defining
    • 46:51merit.
    • 46:53The core principles are your
    • 46:55selection criteria is aligned with
    • 46:56your program's curriculum, health needs
    • 46:58of your community,
    • 47:00and the needs of the
    • 47:01physician workforce.
    • 47:03Make it transparent,
    • 47:04equally apply equitably applied,
    • 47:07and aligned with what support
    • 47:09you can provide.
    • 47:10And then consider the contact
    • 47:11of each individual's unique educational
    • 47:14opportunities,
    • 47:14financial resources,
    • 47:16experiences, motivations,
    • 47:17how they can contribute to
    • 47:18your program and the practice
    • 47:20of medicine.
    • 47:21Then review, interview, and interview
    • 47:23candidates to select a rank
    • 47:25list cohort of learners.
    • 47:27And then at the conclusion
    • 47:28of each
    • 47:29cycle program,
    • 47:31review, evaluate, and refine the
    • 47:32process.
    • 47:34So this is the new
    • 47:35EA EAMC model
    • 47:37that they came up with.
    • 47:38At the core of it
    • 47:39is your program's,
    • 47:41priorities
    • 47:42and the competencies that you
    • 47:43seek.
    • 47:45So your program
    • 47:46is specific mission,
    • 47:48then you look at the
    • 47:49knowledge, skills, and abilities of
    • 47:50the applicants that can support
    • 47:52that defined success.
    • 47:54Look at the experience. What
    • 47:56do they bring hands on?
    • 47:57Are they community,
    • 47:58workers? Are they volunteered in
    • 48:00the community? Do they have,
    • 48:02scientific
    • 48:03experience in the lab, etcetera?
    • 48:06Then the attributes,
    • 48:07resilience,
    • 48:08growth mindset,
    • 48:09self motivation, self drive.
    • 48:12Of course, academics are always
    • 48:13part of it. But also
    • 48:15to look finally look at
    • 48:16the family background, financial status,
    • 48:18education, and personal challenges faced.
    • 48:21And,
    • 48:23so with that, before I
    • 48:24stop, I wanted to mention
    • 48:26that for the first time,
    • 48:26the NRMP is recording the
    • 48:28MENA category,
    • 48:30Middle Eastern and North, African.
    • 48:32And it was in the
    • 48:33graph, but it's it's,
    • 48:35six percent,
    • 48:37six percent of the
    • 48:39of the match
    • 48:41where MENA categories. Now in
    • 48:43terms of in the population
    • 48:44generally, it's about the MENA
    • 48:46population in the United States
    • 48:47based on the census is
    • 48:48about one percent.
    • 48:51So that just to put
    • 48:52that in context. And thank
    • 48:53you. I'll stop now.
    • 49:06Yes. Yeah. I appreciated your
    • 49:08closing
    • 49:09the double AMC,
    • 49:11mission driven.
    • 49:13Yes. Looking at applicants, and
    • 49:15I I hadn't seen that
    • 49:16before.
    • 49:17But it it strikes me
    • 49:19that it's it's actually a
    • 49:20different,
    • 49:22framing than
    • 49:24a lot of the factors
    • 49:25that drove the concerns over
    • 49:27the past year.
    • 49:28Yes. I I feel like
    • 49:30the a lot of the
    • 49:31edicts that
    • 49:32were handed down had to
    • 49:34do more with, like, the
    • 49:35opportunity
    • 49:37for the applicant, the notion
    • 49:38that somehow it's all zero
    • 49:40sum game.
    • 49:41If one applicant,
    • 49:43position in a residency, then
    • 49:45another applicant can't. And and
    • 49:47that's that's one way of
    • 49:48looking at it. But I
    • 49:49actually think as a program
    • 49:50director,
    • 49:51we've always been focused on
    • 49:53the mission. I'm just glad
    • 49:55to see it
    • 49:56stated explicitly. So, for example,
    • 49:58what will this person contribute
    • 50:00to our patients and our
    • 50:01community and our
    • 50:03academic
    • 50:04mission? And and that's always
    • 50:05stated priority, but I think
    • 50:07I think it's important to
    • 50:08reassert this because to me,
    • 50:11a mission driven
    • 50:13approach by definition has to
    • 50:15be diverse.
    • 50:16Correct. Yes. Yeah. Much of
    • 50:18our mission
    • 50:19is diverse. Is diverse.
    • 50:22Example, looking outside
    • 50:23a more narrow pool of
    • 50:25athletes. Like, sometimes there are
    • 50:26people who come from different
    • 50:28backgrounds who are more suited.
    • 50:29So one one simple example
    • 50:32for us is we have
    • 50:33a a very large clinic
    • 50:35that serves a predominantly Spanish
    • 50:36speaking
    • 50:37population.
    • 50:38So that we is very
    • 50:40important for me
    • 50:41to look at applicants who
    • 50:43are are fluent or native
    • 50:45Spanish speakers.
    • 50:46And and culturally competent. So
    • 50:49and that is what,
    • 50:51like, for us at Chicago,
    • 50:53we have big Spanish. So
    • 50:54that's what a lot of
    • 50:55people
    • 50:56but I think this is
    • 50:58in the era or in
    • 50:59the current era. I think
    • 51:00the WMC is trying to
    • 51:02help people
    • 51:04articulate
    • 51:04what it is that they
    • 51:05were looking for and aligning
    • 51:07with your mission. And I
    • 51:08think aligning with your mission
    • 51:10is also
    • 51:12can is I think has
    • 51:13a
    • 51:14a legal umbrella
    • 51:17just to to to be
    • 51:17blunt. It's aligning to that.
    • 51:20So there are a couple
    • 51:21Yeah. Comments or questions in
    • 51:22the chat.
    • 51:24Will Robert, wanna hop on
    • 51:26and ask your question?
    • 51:30Yeah. Hi there. Can you
    • 51:31hear me?
    • 51:32Yes. Yes. Yeah. Hi. Thank
    • 51:34you, for this, you know,
    • 51:35amazing talk. I was wondering,
    • 51:37like, you know, as, somebody
    • 51:38in your position, how do
    • 51:39you signal to trainees the
    • 51:41importance of diversity in this
    • 51:43environment,
    • 51:43particularly, like, if sometimes the
    • 51:45mission statements, like, take diversity
    • 51:46out of that, things like
    • 51:47that? Like, how
    • 51:49do you conceptualize that?
    • 51:51Yeah. So I think it's,
    • 51:54luckily, our our mission statement
    • 51:56here
    • 51:57has not taken that out.
    • 51:58But I think
    • 51:59when you talk to medical
    • 52:01students, GME trainees,
    • 52:03at our end goal, ultimately,
    • 52:05everything that we're we're trying
    • 52:06to achieve
    • 52:08in a way boils down
    • 52:09to health equity.
    • 52:10Right? The United States population
    • 52:13that we need to look
    • 52:14after is very diverse. It's
    • 52:15expanding by twenty twenty
    • 52:18By twenty
    • 52:22forty, the estimated that the
    • 52:23white population will be forty
    • 52:25nine point six percent. So
    • 52:26it so we're going to
    • 52:27we diversity is increasing, and
    • 52:29I think,
    • 52:31when you
    • 52:32dealing with health care,
    • 52:35you I you the need
    • 52:36for diversity just can't end,
    • 52:39right, because it's a very
    • 52:40heterogeneous population. So I think
    • 52:41in terms of,
    • 52:43institutions
    • 52:45may change their their verbiage,
    • 52:46but, ultimately,
    • 52:48health care, health equity,
    • 52:50safe,
    • 52:51high quality care,
    • 52:53everyone in America,
    • 52:55respects that and wants that.
    • 52:57And I think that's one
    • 52:58way to
    • 52:59to keep pushing. And and
    • 53:00then we our outreach and
    • 53:01recruitment continues,
    • 53:04unabated
    • 53:05because
    • 53:07it's really aligned with Yale's
    • 53:08mission, which is
    • 53:11excellence driven by diversity, enriched
    • 53:13curiosity, and enriched by diversity.
    • 53:18Magic hour is upon us,
    • 53:19but Wendy Barr. Comment. Wendy,
    • 53:21you wanna hop out with
    • 53:25yeah. So I was just,
    • 53:27putting a comment. First of
    • 53:28all, thank you so much.
    • 53:29I think at the end,
    • 53:30centering why this is so
    • 53:32important in our outcomes and
    • 53:33and what are we trying
    • 53:34to do,
    • 53:36when we're doing GME.
    • 53:38And it's really about serving
    • 53:40patients, community, and health and
    • 53:43doing that equitably.
    • 53:44The NASEM, the National Academy
    • 53:46of Science in, Medicine met
    • 53:48this week actually to talk
    • 53:49about that. And So I
    • 53:50just put in the chat,
    • 53:52the link to that work
    • 53:53the workshop materials, which I
    • 53:55think is helpful to think
    • 53:56about,
    • 53:57policy things that we can
    • 53:58think about how to support
    • 53:59this moving forward.
    • 54:02Oh, absolutely.
    • 54:05You mean
    • 54:07creating and, deploying policy to
    • 54:09support
    • 54:11health equity?
    • 54:12To support health equity. And
    • 54:14and the way they define
    • 54:15it as a lot you
    • 54:16mentioned a lot about rural
    • 54:17health, making sure we're putting
    • 54:19phys we're training physicians so
    • 54:21that they work in the
    • 54:22places where we don't have
    • 54:24enough physicians,
    • 54:25for populations
    • 54:26that have not been served
    • 54:28well in the past,
    • 54:29you know,
    • 54:31culturally sensitive care, culturally appropriate
    • 54:33care.
    • 54:34All of that ends up,
    • 54:36I think, really falling in
    • 54:37with each other, and all
    • 54:38of this ends up working
    • 54:39with each other. But I
    • 54:40thought what what's interesting is
    • 54:42they really look at,
    • 54:44a lot around state based.
    • 54:47How do we, on state
    • 54:48based level, be able to
    • 54:49work to advocate for this?
    • 54:51So maybe if you think
    • 54:52instead of the maps you
    • 54:53showed. Yeah. Absolutely. And if
    • 54:55you think about it, I
    • 54:56mean, the GME industry, we
    • 54:58are gonna look after we
    • 54:59I mean, this this is
    • 55:01we produce
    • 55:03whoever is gonna look after
    • 55:04whoever in the future. Right?
    • 55:06And and I think a
    • 55:07lot of the policies currently,
    • 55:09we're shooting ourselves in the
    • 55:10foot, especially when it comes
    • 55:11to rural rural health care.
    • 55:14Yeah. Absolutely.
    • 55:16Okay. Some thanks from, other
    • 55:18folks, including Andy Asness and
    • 55:20Shali Gupta and others.
    • 55:22And, Ben, thank you for
    • 55:24me and No.
    • 55:25For a wonderful presentation.
    • 55:27Thank you.