Students from marginalized groups leave medical school at higher rates than peers ...Middle East

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Students from marginalized groups leave medical school at higher rates than peers
Story at a glance Researchers at Yale University found that non-white medical students were more likely to drop out in comparison to their white counterparts.  Students of color who also grew up in a low-income household and in an under-resourced neighborhood had an even higher chance of dropping out.  They attributed the high dropout rates to implicit biases and lack of diversity with medical school faculty.  Medical students who are low-income and identify as non-white are more likely to leave medical school, a pattern that researchers say has implications for health care access for patients and the overarching medical workforce.   Researchers at Yale Univ

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