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Since 1979, the State of Illinois has been
conducting quietly and without fanfare an extraordinarily novel and ambitious
experiment in professional career development: the Chicago Area Health and
Medical Careers Program (CAHMCP). CAHMCP is cooperative project offered
by the seven Chicago area medical schools and the state's three dental schools;
Chicago State University, the Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) and several
health-focused community groups who have adopted the unified mission of increasing
the number of qualified minority applicants and matriculants to medical and
other health professional schools. (The term "minority" or
"underrepresented minority" (URM) refers to persons of the following
groups who are underrepresented in the major health care professions:
African Americans, Mexican Americans, Native Americans, and Puerto Rican Americans.)
CAHMCP (pronounced "Champ") is what
educators term a longitudinal intervention or "pipeline" program;
that is, it identifies and recruits its participants at a very early point
in their academic development and provides successive years of very structured
academics, counseling, motivational and financial support until its charges
reach their long-range career goalGraduation with the doctorate in one
of the MODVOPPPP professions (medicine, osteopathy, dentistry, veterinary
science, optometry, pharmacy, podiatry, and public health). Presently,
there are more than 800 active participants in the CAHMCP pipeline that extends
from seventh-grade through the final year of health professional school.
Kids come to CAHMCP as relative "babies" and leave formal participation
as neo-middle-agers. Actually, some of CAHMCP's most stalwart and contributive
members are the scores of medical residents and practicing MODVOPPPP professional
who mentor their younger CAHMCP brothers and sisters.
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