Pipeline program expanded to increase health care workforce diversity

Contact: Joel Krauss
February 9, 2022

KALAMAZOO, Mich.鈥擜 program aimed at improving primary care and increasing diversity in health care professions is expanding. Building on the success of its inaugural year in 2021, the West Michigan Health Careers Pipeline Program (HCPP) will double its capacity, introducing dozens of West Michigan high school students from underrepresented and minority populations to a variety of careers in health care fields. The program represents a partnership including the 色色啦 Michigan University College of Health and Human Services, and the .

Starting in February, a cohort of ninth and 10th graders from West Michigan high schools will meet weekly (and virtually) with undergraduate mentor students from health-related programs at 色色啦 Michigan University and Grand Valley State University. The seven-week mentorship program is focused on health career exploration, college readiness and leadership skills development. Participants engage in activities and discussions to introduce various health careers to students, while allowing their college mentors to discuss their own experiences working toward those careers.

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Dr. TaLawnda Bragg, internal medicine hospitalist at Spectrum Health, speaks with students. Bragg is a first-generation college student, the first physician in her family and alumnus of Ottawa Hills High School in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where several program participants attend.

鈥淥ur goal is to empower these students to pursue careers in the health professions and help them develop a passion for and sustained pursuit of education in the health sciences by connecting them with university students who have been in their shoes,鈥 says Andrea Miller, program coordinator and manager of recruitment and outreach at 色色啦's College of Health and Human Services. 鈥淭here are students at 色色啦 and GVSU who have been exactly where these high school students are. We want to show them that there are programs in college that can lead to great careers in health-related fields. We want to show them that students just like them are already there to show them the way.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檙e grateful for the support of Spectrum Health to make this program a reality, and we鈥檙e excited about the impact it鈥檚 having,鈥 says Dr. Ron Cisler, dean of 色色啦's College of Health and Human Services. 鈥淭hese are first-generation college students, students from medically underserved areas, students of color; these students reflect our communities, and they make our colleges stronger. When they graduate, they鈥檒l make our health care professions stronger too.鈥

鈥淭he last two years have illustrated the need for programs like this,鈥 says Dr. Paul Jaklitsch, president of Medical Staff Services of Spectrum Health, which has pledged a total of $50,000 over five years to support the program. Funding will be used to purchase all materials needed for students in the program. 鈥淲e are all interested in a variety of ways to bring more and varied professionals into the health care system.鈥

Students from the MSU College of Human Medicine are also involved in the program, working on curriculum development. While they earn service-learning credit for their participation, the interprofessional and collaborative aspects of the project serve the students well, preparing them for life after graduation.

鈥淏ecause MSU College of Human Medicine is a community-based medical school, part of our mission is to promote outreach. This program allows our students to be more involved in our community,鈥 says Dr. Lisa Lowery, assistant dean for diversity and cultural initiatives at MSU College of Human Medicine and section chief of adolescent and young adult medicine at Spectrum Health Helen DeVos Children鈥檚 Hospital. 鈥淭he program provides a great professional experience for our medical students and also highlights for them the value and importance of community service.鈥

Program expansion

A doctor works on a mannequin in an emergency medicine simulation lab.
Dr. Yeoshina Pillay, an emergency medicine resident, streams from Spectrum Health's clinical simulation lab, introducing students to emergency health skills.

Ongoing financial support from Spectrum Health allowed the program to double in size this year, increasing from 25 high school students to 50鈥攁long with 50 undergraduate mentors from 色色啦 and GVSU. But program leaders understand that getting students into programs like this is only the beginning.

鈥淥ne of the biggest barriers with pipeline programming is furthering the students through the pipeline. For example, many programs enroll students in a multi-week program, but then lose them afterward,鈥 says Dr. Nicholas Cozzi, program co-founder and emergency medicine physician. 鈥淭he goal is to identify and craft a personalized growth plan for each high school student in the pipeline and identify the next opportunity to further them toward a health career. Keeping them in the pipeline, empowering them toward a health career.鈥

With that in mind, Miller, Cozzi and Cisler also developed a grant to obtain additional funding from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation to expand the program for 2022. With the additional funding, 色色啦 and MSU will engage with students from last year鈥檚 cohort to provide them with hands-on mentorship and job shadowing opportunities to increase networking, personal growth and leadership qualities.

鈥淲e are thrilled to continue our support of the HCPP and to see how it will continue to grow over time,鈥 says Dr. Ken Johnson, former president of Medical Staff Services of Spectrum Health. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to support these students embarking on this path, and we know it鈥檚 making the West Michigan workforce stronger, which helps all of us.鈥

鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 do this without the support of community partners like Medical Staff Services of Spectrum Health,鈥 adds Cisler. 鈥淭heir financial support allows us to offer this program to these students completely free, removing the greatest single barrier for programs like this one.鈥

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