TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 11月29日 02時23分
The shift to online learning at U.S. medical schools was a logistical undertaking, but the harder work may be producing doctors who are better equipped to take on the systemic issues exposed by the pandemic, like race-based health disparities, uneven access to care and ballooning treatment costs. At Kaiser Permanente, that preparation began before students even started classes this summer. The entire class was invited to a virtual check-in to discuss the racial-justice movement, and the conversation hasn't stopped since, says 26-year-old first-year student Cruz Riley, who has a special interest in Black maternal health. "You would think we would be talking about what we watched on Netflix," says Riley, photographed on campus in Pasadena, Calif. "But we are always talking about systematic inequality, and we are always bouncing ideas off each other." Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by Bethany Mollenkof (@fancybethany) for TIME
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