Annals of Global Health (Nov 2022)

Undergraduate Medical Education Reform in Viet Nam for a Primary Health Care Workforce

  • David B. Duong,
  • Tuan A. Nguyen,
  • Kristen Goodell,
  • Nora Y. Osman,
  • Tam M. Nguyen,
  • Van-Anh T. Pham,
  • Loan T. Vu,
  • Hong-Anh T. Vu,
  • Lisa A. Cosimi,
  • Todd Pollack,
  • Barbara Gottlieb

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3755
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 88, no. 1

Abstract

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Strong primary health care (PHC) systems require a robust PHC workforce. Traditionally, medical education takes place in academic medical centres that favour subspecialty care rather than PHC settings. This may undervalue primary care as a career and contribute to a shortage of PHC workers. However, designing undergraduate medical education curricula that incorporate early experiences in clinical care delivery at PHC sites remains a challenge, including in many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). This paper describes how a collaboration between Harvard Medical School and five medical schools in Vietnam, and in-country collaborations among the Vietnamese medical schools, facilitated curricular innovation and co-creation of coursework relevant to PHC through the development of a Practice of Medicine (POM) course. The collaboration implemented a technical assistance strategy consisting of in-person workshops, focused virtual consultations, on-site ‘office hours’, site visits and observations to each of the five medical universities, and immersion trips to support the creation and implementation of the POM course. A pilot program was started at a single site and then scaled nationally using local customisation, experience, and expertise utilising a train-the-trainers approach. As a result, five new POM courses have been developed by five Vietnamese institutions. Fifty Vietnamese faculty received training to lead the POM course development, and 228 community-based preceptors have been trained to teach students at PHC sites. A total of 52 new PHC and community-based clinical training sites have been added, and 3,615 students have completed or are currently going through a POM course. This experience can serve as a model for future academic collaborations to support the development of a robust PHC workforce for the 21st century.

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