research Performance Evaluation of the Generative Pre-trained Transformer (GPT-4) on the Family Medicine In-Training Examination Read Performance Evaluation of the Generative Pre-trained Transformer (GPT-4) on the Family Medicine In-Training Examination
Phoenix Newsletter - March 2025 President’s Message: ABFM’s Unwavering Commitment to Diplomates and the Specialty Read President’s Message: ABFM’s Unwavering Commitment to Diplomates and the Specialty
A Conversation with Dr. Phillip Wagner “Family Medicine Was All I Ever Wanted to Do” Dr. Phillip Wagner Read “Family Medicine Was All I Ever Wanted to Do”
Home Research Research Library WORKING TO ADVANCE THE HEALTH OF RURAL AMERICANS: AN UPDATE FROM THE ABFM WORKING TO ADVANCE THE HEALTH OF RURAL AMERICANS: AN UPDATE FROM THE ABFM 2020 Topic(s) Family Medicine Certification, Role of Primary Care, and What Family Physicians Do Over the past 5 decades, existing disparities between the health of rural and urban Americans has grown across a range of outcomes. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),1 the 46 million people living in rural America are not only increasingly more likely than urban counterparts to die from each of the top 5 sources of adult mortality—heart disease, cancer, unintentional injury, chronic lower respiratory disease, and stroke—but also experienced a widening gap in child and adolescent death rates between 1999-2017.2 James and colleagues describe a “rural mortality penalty,” first emerging in the mid-1980s, and rapidly growing higher in the subsequent decades to which 448,000 excess deaths can be attributed by 2007.3 Many rural areas have longstanding disparities compared with urban areas in social determinants of health4,5—poverty, intimate partner violence, access to services, economic opportunity, homelessness—and these are often concentrated in rural areas with high percentages of minorities.6 New challenges such as the opioid epidemic and increasing multimorbidity have compounded these longstanding disparities in social determinants while access to health care services in rural areas is also in decline. For example, a recent paper found that from 2005 to 2015, the supply of primary care physicians, relative to the population, decreased with rural counties declining more on average than urban counties (–7.0 per 100,000 population vs –2.6 per 100,000 population).7 Additionally, 162 rural hospitals closed between 2005-2019 in an accelerating fashion.8 Access to specialty health care services remains a significant challenge for rural populations. Read More ABFM Research Read all 2024 Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care Go to Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care 2023 Racial/Ethnic Minority Identifying Family Physicians Are More Likely to Work in Solo Practices Go to Racial/Ethnic Minority Identifying Family Physicians Are More Likely to Work in Solo Practices 2011 Establishing a baseline: health information technology adoption among family medicine diplomates Go to Establishing a baseline: health information technology adoption among family medicine diplomates 2010 Family medicine at 40 years of age: the journey to transformation continues Go to Family medicine at 40 years of age: the journey to transformation continues
ABFM Research Read all 2024 Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care Go to Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care 2023 Racial/Ethnic Minority Identifying Family Physicians Are More Likely to Work in Solo Practices Go to Racial/Ethnic Minority Identifying Family Physicians Are More Likely to Work in Solo Practices 2011 Establishing a baseline: health information technology adoption among family medicine diplomates Go to Establishing a baseline: health information technology adoption among family medicine diplomates 2010 Family medicine at 40 years of age: the journey to transformation continues Go to Family medicine at 40 years of age: the journey to transformation continues
2024 Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care Go to Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care
2023 Racial/Ethnic Minority Identifying Family Physicians Are More Likely to Work in Solo Practices Go to Racial/Ethnic Minority Identifying Family Physicians Are More Likely to Work in Solo Practices
2011 Establishing a baseline: health information technology adoption among family medicine diplomates Go to Establishing a baseline: health information technology adoption among family medicine diplomates
2010 Family medicine at 40 years of age: the journey to transformation continues Go to Family medicine at 40 years of age: the journey to transformation continues