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OHSU partners with CareOregon to launch Oregon’s only preventive medicine residency

New program to train physicians in addressing pressing, community-wide health challenges; OHSU now has more than 100 accredited residency, fellowship programs
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A medical professional touches the knee of a patient on a bed in an exam room. A Klamath Falls patient talks with Katie Ruth, M.D., of the Cascades East Family Medicine Residency in Klamath Falls. Now, an innovative partnership between OHSU and CareOregon is establishing another residency program: OHSU Preventive Medicine Residency Program, which will train physicians to improve the health of individuals as well as whole communities. OHSU now has more than 100 accredited residencies and fellowships. (OHSU/Kristyna Wentz-Graff)
A Klamath Falls patient talks with Katie Ruth, M.D., of the Cascades East Family Medicine Residency in Klamath Falls. Now, an innovative partnership between OHSU and CareOregon is establishing another residency program: the OHSU Preventive Medicine Residency Program, which will train physicians to improve the health of individuals as well as whole communities. OHSU now has more than 100 accredited residencies and fellowships. (OHSU/Kristyna Wentz-Graff)

An innovative partnership between Oregon Health & Science University and CareOregon will establish a new residency program designed to improve the health of individuals, but also whole communities.

CareOregon is providing $2.5 million through 2030 to launch the OHSU Preventive Medicine Residency Program. It will be the state’s only preventive medicine residency when its first two residents begin training in summer 2025. Potential participants can apply starting this fall.

The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education recently granted the program accreditation, helping OHSU achieve a milestone of having more than 100 accredited residency and fellowship programs.

Joyce Hollander-Rodriguez, M.D. (OHSU), brown curly hair, smiling.
Joyce Hollander-Rodriguez, M.D. (OHSU)

“Preventive medicine physicians are needed now more than ever after the COVID-19 pandemic laid bare the many daunting challenges Oregonians face while trying to lead healthy lives,” said Joyce Hollander-Rodriguez, M.D., associate dean for graduate medical education and associate professor of family medicine in the OHSU School of Medicine. “The OHSU Preventive Medicine Residency Program will prepare the next generation of health leaders to tackle these pressing issues head-on.”

Safina Koreishi, M.D., M.P.H. (Courtesy) short dark hair, smiling
Safina Koreishi, M.D., M.P.H. (Courtesy)

“CareOregon is passionate about supporting workforce development and cultivating strong leaders throughout the state who focus on improving health systems by addressing the systemic and social issues that impede health outcomes in our population,” said Safina Koreishi, M.D., M.P.H., CareOregon’s senior medical director of clinical services. “This partnership between CareOregon and the OHSU School of Medicine is one of a kind in the nation. It points to the shared mission of the two organizations to address the most challenging issues impacting our communities.”

Physicians who complete residencies in preventive medicine — a medical specialty that aims to prevent disease, disability and death by combining public health with clinical medicine — often work at government and international health organizations that lead efforts to resolve large health challenges.  

In 2019, about 2,475 physicians in the United States were board-certified in preventive medicine. However, experts have estimated that public health agencies alone need as many as 23,500 physicians. A recent American Journal of Public Health essay advocates for more preventive medicine residency training programs like OHSU’s to address the “large burden” of preventable health issues and reinforce the public health workforce.

Residency programs provide advanced training and enable physicians to specialize in a specific medical field. Although physicians typically become residents immediately after completing medical school, many enter preventive medicine residency programs after years of medical practice to either shift or expand the focus of their careers by including leadership or research in their work.

Oregon tradition renewed

The program is a new iteration of a long-standing Oregon tradition in training preventive medicine specialists. OHSU has trained preventive medicine residents since the 1970s, but limited funding forced an earlier residency program to close in 2018.

Numerous graduates of OHSU’s previous program have since become prominent Oregon health leaders. The prior program’s alumni include: Oregon Medical Association President and Kaiser Permanente physician Amy Hinrichs, M.D.; Oregon Health Authority Deputy State Health Officer and Epidemiologist Tom Jeanne, M.D., M.P.H.; Tri-County Deputy Health Officer and Deputy Multnomah County Health Officer Teresa Everson, M.D., M.P.H.; Clackamas County Health Officer Sarah Present, M.D., M.P.H.; Health Share of Oregon Medical Director Cat Livingston, M.D., M.P.H.; Central City Concern Senior Medical Director Amanda Risser M.D., M.P.H.; and CareOregon Senior Medical Director of Clinical Services Safina Koreishi, M.D., M.P.H.

Brian Garvey, M.D., M.P.H. (OHSU) short blond hair with glasses- smiling.
Brian Garvey, M.D., M.P.H. (OHSU)

The OHSU Preventive Medicine Residency Program will be directed by Brian Garvey, M.D., M.P.H., an associate professor of family medicine in the OHSU School of Medicine who also completed the previous residency program. 

The new program will offer a two-year curriculum that includes earning a master’s degree in public health from the OHSU-PSU School of Public Health. It will provide hands-on training opportunities at OHSU Hospital and county-run clinics, as well as with health officers of both urban and rural counties. Its residents will also learn alongside CareOregon employees helping the state’s Medicaid beneficiaries navigate health systems, providing behavioral health support, developing opioid and substance use disorder policies, and more.

The new program is part of the OHSU School of Medicine’s ongoing and dedicated efforts to expand residency options statewide. OHSU also partnered with Hillsboro Medical Center to establish three new programs that train internal medicine, family medicine and transitional-year residents. And the Three Sisters Family Rural Track Program, a joint effort of OHSU and the St. Charles Health System in Central Oregon, will welcome its first family medicine residents this summer.

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