Employee & Student Diversity Pipelines and Partnerships JABSOM Annual Report

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+ Employee & Student Diversity Pipelines and Partnerships JABSOM Annual Report 2014-2015 Winona Kaʻalouahi Lee, MD AAMC Diversity Officer October 16, 2015

+ LCME Standard 3, Element 3.3 2

+ LCME White Paper LCME Consensus Statement March 2015 3 Related to Satisfaction with Element 3.3, Diversity/Pipeline Programs & Partnerships Medical education programs will be found to be satisfactory with Element 3.3 when they have ALL of the following:! A mission-appropriate diversity policy with identification of diversity groups for students, faculty and senior administrative staff.! Ongoing systematic recruitment and retention activities, e.g. pipeline programs and partnerships, to achieve mission-appropriate diversity outcomes in its students, faculty and senior administrative staff. www.lcme/publications.htm

+ LCME White Paper LCME Consensus Statement (continued) 4! Methods to evaluate the effectiveness of activities to achieve the missionappropriate diversity outcomes.! Evidence of effectiveness of the diversity efforts, including offers made and numbers reflecting progress in achieving mission-appropriate diversity outcomes.! Evaluation of the sufficiency of the numbers may consider the context of the institution, reasonable timelines for achieving measurable mission-appropriate diversity outcomes, and other supporting data indicative of success in achieving mission-appropriate diversity outcomes.

+ How are other medical schools doing? 5 LCME Citations related to Element 3.3! 2009-2012 Of the 71 site visits conducted, 39% of schools had a citation! Of the schools that received citations, 50% were due to a failure to clearly define categories and 61% lacked demonstrated effort.! 2013-2015 27% of schools were NOT in compliance; and an additional 29% were in compliance with a need for monitoring GDI Webinar on Element 3.3 September 24, 2015

+ Key Points Related to Element 3.3 6! Have an institutional mission-related diversity that is measurable! Demonstrate effort through pipeline programs that impact the local and national medical school applicant pool! Demonstrate effort in diversifying faculty, particularly senior administrative staff! Must have a method of tracking applicants, offers, and matriculants/hires in order to evaluate success recruitment and retention of diverse students and faculty! Goal is to achieve student and faculty diversity in order to enhance the learning environment for all medical students

+ How are we doing?! Institutional diversity policy formally approved in 2014! JABSOM Diversity Dashboard group convened to monitor and report outcomes as outlined in the policy! Today is the first annual diversity report to JABSOM Executive Committee

+ Institutional Diversity Statement The John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM) embraces diversity and inclusion as part of our shared Hawaiian, Asian and Pacific values. These shared values are responsive to our unique location in the center of the Pacific. We uphold that an environment of inclusiveness, equal opportunity and respect for the similarities and differences in our communities advances our mission of education, research and innovation, community service and clinical healing. JABSOM is committed to preparing a culturally competent health and science workforce that meets the needs of Hawaiʻi. We strive to reflect the demographics of Hawaiʻi, including representation of Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, individuals from rural areas of Hawaiʻi, first generation college students and those from economically, socially, and educationally disadvantaged backgrounds. JABSOM is cultivating a transformative teaching and learning environment that promotes the recruitment and retention of students, faculty, and staff, who are representative of the diverse population of Hawaiʻi.

+ Objective 1 Student Diversity Institutional Diversity Policy Objective 1. The medical school supports initiatives including the ʻImi Hoʻōla Post-Baccalaureate Program, the Native Hawaiian Center of Excellence (NHCOE), the Area Health Education Center (AHEC) program and the Health Careers Opportunity Program (HCOP). These programs are designed to promote medical student diversity in the dimensions of gender, ethnicity, geographic origin and economic background, with the goal of having an inclusive student body that reflects the diversity of Hawaiʻi. Activities & Outcomes to be monitored: 1. The medical school will maintain post-baccalaureate program and medical student admission policies and practices that are aligned with the institutional diversity policy. 2. The maintenance and/or growth of program to recruit or retain a diverse medical student body, with annual tracking of the results of these programs in terms of contributing to the diversity of the medical student body. 3. Diversity of the medical student body along the abovementioned dimensions will be tracked and reviewed on an annual basis. Progress will be made towards the objective by providing feedback to those involved in the admissions process and assessing the availability of scholarships and other incentives for qualified student applicants meeting diversity needs.

2225 Applicants 1970 Non-Residents 255 Residents AMCAS 10 310 Interviews 110 Non-Residents 200 Residents Letters of Recommendation JABSOM Essays 66 Matriculants 8 ʻImi Hoʻōla (14%) 10 Non-Residents 56 Residents Admissions Committee Source: JABSOM Admissions Database 2014-2015 AY

+ Matriculant Demographics Class of 2018 11 Gender Self-Reported Ethnicity 37 Males (56%) 29 Females (44%) Source: JABSOM OSA 2014-2015 AY

+ Matriculant Origin Class of 2018! 66 Matriculants! 56 Residents (85%)! 47 Honolulu County! 9 Neighbor Island (16%)! 7 Hawaii County! 1 Maui County! 1 Kauai County! 10 Non-Residents (15%)! 8 Continental US! 1 Guam! 1 Pohnpei Kauaʻi 1 Maui 1 Oʻahu 47 Hawaiʻi 7 12 Source: JABSOM OSA 2014-2015 AY

+ JABSOM Diversity Pipeline Programs 13! Imi Hoʻōla Post-Baccalaureate Program! Native Hawaiian Center of Excellence (NHCOE)! Area Health Education Center (AHEC)! Health Careers Opportunity Program

+ 14! Mission is to improve health care for Hawaiʻi and Pacific! Opens the door to medicine for individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds and diverse communities ʻImi Hoʻōla Class of 2011-2012 JABSOM Class of 2016! Upon successful completion of the program, students enter JABSOM as first-year medical students

+ ʻImi Hoʻōla 15 Class of 2014-2015 67 Applicants 12 Enrollees 10 Completers

+ ʻImi Hoʻōla Student Demographics 16 Class of 2014-2015 Gender Self-Reported Ethnicity 2 Males (18%) 9 Females (82%)

+ ʻImi Hoʻōla Student Geographic Origin 17 1 1 7 1 1

+ ʻImi Hoʻōla 1 st Generation College Students 18 Class of 2014-2015

+ Imi Ho ōla Contributions to Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Diversity of JABSOM Graduates (1978-2015) 19 Totals Hawaiian = 89/233 (38%) Filipino = 60/185 (32%) Chamorro = 19/34 (56%) Samoan = 14/17 (82%) Micronesian = 11/20 (55%) Imi Hoʻōla Graduates = 242 JABSOM Graduates = 2,245 Source: JABSOM OSA & Imi Ho ōla Alumni Database (1978-2015)

+ Native Hawaiian Center of Excellence (NHCOE)! NHCOE seeks to improve the health of Native Hawaiians through education, research, and community partnerships! Focus is to empower Native Hawaiian students and faculty to succeed in medicine and other health professions NHCOE faculty partner with community physicians and JABSOM students to conduct recruitment visits on Hawai i Island and Lana i

+ NHCOE Strengthening Educational Pipeline for Native Hawaiian Students Pre- Medical Students! Health Careers Presentations statewide (K- 12, college)! Native Hawaiian Pathways to Medicine Program! Native Hawaiian Interdisciplinary Health Program! Nānākuli Pathways to Health Medical Students! Step 1 and 2 United States Medical Licensing Exam Preparation! Funding to support student health disparities research and presentation at national conferences! Advising and mentoring services for Native Hawaiian medical students! Leads all cultural competency training at JABSOM

+ NHCOE Outcomes 2009-2014 22! Over 4,500 K-12 and college students exposed to the health professions! 96 JABSOM students and graduates have come through the NHCOE pipeline (NHCOE Fellowship, Rural Health Training Support)! 57 Native Hawaiians trained through the Pathway to Medicine Program and the Native Hawaiian Interdisciplinary Health Program! 100% of JABSOM 1 st and 2nd year medical students undergo cultural competency training

+ Area Health Education Center (AHEC) Pre-Medical and Medical Student Initiatives! Teen Health Camp and Teen Mentorship Academy! Ku I Ka Mana (Waimanalo)! High School and College Student Outreach! Speaker s Bureau Teen Health Camp was created in 2010 by JABSOM medical students and public health students and is directly supported by AHEC. Teresa Schiff (on far left) is one of the founding student members.! Science Teacher Training! Pre-Health Career Corps Program! HOSA and Health Careers Opportunity Program support! Medical Student Mentorship Program Support! Pre-Health Advising Center Support! Health Career Navigator Book

+ AHEC Education, Training and Outreach Initiatives 2014-2015 Outcomes! Health careers recruitment activities for 3,433 students! 8,000 hours of CME for over 2,000 providers! Interprofessional training for 300 students/year in Hawaiʻi and Pacific! Annual Health Workforce Summit! State Loan Repayment Program! Hawaiʻi Health Workforce Committee! Physician Workforce Assessment for State of Hawaiʻi! Hawaiʻi Health Workforce Advisory Board

+ UHM Health Careers Opportunity Program (HCOP) Student outcomes (2001 2014) 25! Offers opportunities to disadvantaged students to develop skills to successfully enter and complete health professional schools! 414 high school & college students participated in residential summer programs; 900 hands-on health career exploration activities; 3,000 on-campus visits to UH-Mānoa and Kapiʻolani CC! Partnership with Philippine Medical Association of Hawaii (PMAH) to mentor students interested in health professions! New HCOP grant received in 2015 Brian Imada (on far right) is an HCOP and Imi Ho ōla graduate. He is now a 4 th year JABSOM student.

+ + UH-Manoa Health Careers Opportunity Program (2001 2014) Participants (N = 414) Gender Self-Reported Ethnicity 62 Males (15%) 350 Females (84.5%) 2 No Data (.5%)

+ Objective 2 Institutional Diversity Policy Objective 2. The medical school is committed to creating a diverse workplace within the school, whereby faculty, staff and administrative leadership reflect the ethnic diversity of Hawaiʻi and promotes gender equity. Activities & Outcomes to be monitored: 1. The medical school will establish hiring policies and practices that are aligned with the institutional diversity policy. 2. Diversity of the faculty, staff and administrative leadership of the school along the abovementioned dimensions will be tracked and reviewed on an annual basis. 3. Progress will be made towards the objective by providing feedback to those involved in the selections process and assessing the strategies used to enhance the diversity of qualified applicants.

+ JABSOM Office of the Dean 28 Overall! (n = 81 ) Gender Self-Reported Ethnicity Mixed 2% African American 4% 27 Males (33%) 54 Females (67%) Other Asian 4% NHOPI 6% White 16% Japanese 47% Chinese 15% Filipino 6%

+ JABSOM Office of the Dean 29 Faculty! (n = 14) Gender Self-Reported Ethnicity 3 Males (21%) 11 Females (79%)

+ JABSOM Office of the Dean 30 Staff! (n = 67 ) Gender Self-Reported Ethnicity 24 Males (36%) 43 Females (64%)

+ JABSOM Employee Overall! 31 (n = 461) Gender Self-Reported Ethnicity 230 Males (49.9%) 231 Females (50.1%)

+ JABSOM Employee Faculty! 32 (n = 419) Gender Self-Reported Ethnicity 222 Males (53%) 197 Females (47%)

+ JABSOM Employee Staff! (n = 42) 33 Gender Self-Reported Ethnicity 8 Males (19%) 34 Females (81%)

+ JABSOM HR Initiatives 34! JABSOM HR monitors employee data using HR DataMart (system that stores/archives personnel data)! JABSOM HR is developing a recruitment training which will cover University and JABSOM policies, procedures and practices related to recruitment! Each Department has the opportunity to identify underrepresented groups and JABSOM HR can assist in identifying additional venues for advertisement to increase outreach to these groups

+ Diversity Report Summary 35! JABSOM s diversity policy demonstrates the institution s commitment to increasing diversity of the students and faculty that will ultimately enhance the learning environment for all students! Key pipeline programs have demonstrated success and we will continue to monitor its outreach to the community and impact on JABSOM s student population! JABSOM HR will continue to promote faculty and staff diversity in its recruitment initiatives

+ Next Steps 36! Ensure that admissions policies (i.e. post-baccalaureate and JABSOM) and employee hiring policies are aligned with the institutional diversity policy! Increase awareness of the diversity policy and pipeline efforts among JABSOM students, faculty and staff! Develop, maintain and expand programs that recruit and retain diverse students, faculty and staff! Continue to track and review diversity of medical students, faculty, staff and leadership on an annual basis

+ Mahalo 37! JABSOM Diversity Task Force and Diversity Dashboard Working Group! Dr. Richard Kasuya, Co-Chair Diversity Task Force! Dr. Ivy Nip Asano, Admissions! Ms. Marilyn Nishiki, JABSOM Registrar! Jeff Long, Human Resources! Dr. Kelley Withy, AHEC! Ms. Agnes Malate, HCOP! Dr. Malia Lee, NHCOE! Ms. Celeste Wong, ʻImi Hoʻōla! Ms. Mālia Purdy, Department of Native Hawaiian Health