| |
NYS
AHEC SYSTEM
Dept. of Family Medicine
University at Buffalo
462 Grider Street
Buffalo, NY 14215
(716) 898-4699
ahec-info@buffalo.edu

|
The New York State AHEC System...
| Connecting
students to careers,
professionals to communities,
and communities to better health. |
New
York State suffers from both a drastic shortage and a serious lack of
diversity in its health care workforce. The New York State Area Health
Education Center (AHEC) System is a workforce development initiative established
in 1998 to find solutions to these problems. Long long-range goals are
to cultivate a workforce that more closely matches the state’s population
in diversity, to assure that each community has enough practitioners in
the right categories, particularly primary care, and ultimately to improve
access to quality health care for everyone. Through nine AHECs based in
communities across the state (Buffalo, Bronx, Brooklyn, Canton, Cortland,
Glens Falls, Highland, New York, and Warsaw), the New York State AHEC
System works with health care institutions, practicing professionals and
educators at all levels to promote careers in health care, especially
with underserved populations.
Strategies
include:
• developing opportunities for future health professionals to receive
their clinical training in underserved areas, and recruiting faculty committed
to working with them;
• encouraging young people, especially those from under-represented
and disadvantaged backgrounds, to pursue health careers; and
• providing continuing education and professional support to health
practitioners, developing career ladders that enable workers to advance,
and promoting programs for adults re-entering the workforce.
Mission
To enhance access to quality health care and improve health care outcomes
by addressing the health workforce needs of medically disadvantaged communities
and populations through partnerships between the institutions that train
health professionals and the communities that need them most.
“Connecting
students to careers, professionals to communities, and communities to
better health.”
Connecting
students to careers
It is hard to imagine working in a field without any knowledge or role
models. One of AHEC’s strategies is to guide students into an education
“pipeline,” exposing them to the rewards of health care careers
as early as possible. This not only encourages interest in health care,
it also helps to assure that students take the math and science courses
required for acceptance into college or training programs.
AHEC efforts also
target adults who are seeking a new career, whose jobs have been eliminated,
or who need new skills to keep pace with advancing technologies. Programs
for retraining – plus assistance to overcome obstacles such as child
care or transportation – direct people with good work skills into
rewarding new careers in health care.
Connecting
professionals to communities
Health care workers often return to practice where they were trained,
and students learn from experience that it’s rewarding to work in
underserved areas. That is why AHEC connects young people, students and
practicing professionals to training opportunities with minority and disadvantaged
populations, in rural areas and inner city neighborhoods.
Connecting
communities to better health
Because AHECs emphasize community partnerships, AHEC training programs
reflect each area’s unique needs and priorities. In rural settings,
training focuses on overcoming distance, or supporting science and math
exposure in smaller schools. In lower-income urban areas, training focuses
on basic health and preventive care, as well as educating students about
disparities so they can better understand the community. Ultimately, New
York State AHEC System efforts will help achieve a more balanced distribution
of health care resources and professionals – and thus better health
– throughout the state.
The New York State
AHEC System is funded through the federal Department of Health and Human
Services (Bureau of Health Professions), New York State’s Health
Care Reform Act of 2000, and local community support.
The New York State
AHEC System is a member of the National AHEC Organization (NAO), representing
AHECs in almost every state and the District of Columbia.

|