The COMmunicator 2019-20 Vol. 3 | Page 37

have lead Maine AHEC and UNE to work on increasing their presence in that region.

Exacerbating the situation, many of rural Maine’s current health care providers are approaching retirement and communities have little or no plan in place to replace them once they retire.

The Maine CUP AHEC Scholars program is helping combat the rural health care crisis. Through its Rural Health Immersion and Rural Health Clerkship, the program exposes health professions students to rural health early and often throughout their education. Research suggests such exposure will increase the likelihood of the students returning to these communities following graduation.

“The chances that a student will return to a community to practice once they graduate is very relationship dependent,” said Ian Imbert, M.P.H., CUP AHEC Scholars program manager. “We try to place students in the same communities for their rural health experiences so that they develop long-lasting relationships within those communities.”

Imbert said that the program is only in its third year, and that it is too soon to tell if these experiences will be successful in attracting students in practicing health care in rural areas. However, he said, feedback has been overwhelmingly positive.

Monthony said she was unfamiliar with the rural health care landscape in Maine prior to her immersion in 2018. In learning she would return to MDI Hospital for her clerkship this year, she said she was excited and felt better prepared to serve the community.

“I learned so much about the services that members of the health care team provide to their community as well as their importance in maintaining and improving the health of individuals and the community as a whole,” she said. “The Rural Health Immersion and Rural Clerkship have reinforced my practice intentions to be a rural health care provider.”

MDI Hospital, located in Hancock County, services the southern portion of the Downeast region. It has been committed to the education and training of health professions students and over the years has hired a number of UNE graduates to join their staff.

“It was a pleasure working with Justine during her community health rotation at Mount Desert Island Hospital,” said Julian Kuffler, M.D., M.P.H., director of medical education at the hospital. “The experience helped expose Justine to the services that can exist in a rural community. If she ends up practicing in an underserved area, she’ll be better prepared to develop programs for that community.” <>

Read the article in UNE News