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Accessibility in health professions education: The Flexner Report and barriers to diversity in American physical therapy

Andrew J. Hogan

Social Science & Medicine, 2024, vol. 341, issue C

Abstract: Health professionals do not reflect the broader racial/ethnic diversity of the United States. Historical barriers to accessing health professions education have played a major role in initiating and perpetuating these disparities. Sociologists of professions have highlighted the role of educational reform in professions' efforts to enhance their status, but have overlooked the central role of government bodies in facilitating or impeding these strategies. The Flexner Report (1910) enhanced the status of medicine, but only after state medical boards adopted its recommendations, leading to the closure of half of the nation's medical schools and limiting opportunities for marginalized populations to enter the medical profession. Physical therapy leaders have espoused Flexner's precepts in seeking to advance their field's professionalization. In doing so, they consistently overlooked the more insidious impacts of Flexnerian approaches on student and practitioner diversity. This article examines how physical therapy's Flexnerian ambitions disrupted its parallel efforts to increase the field's racial/ethnic diversity. I argue that physical therapy leaders' focus on enhancing their profession's status and indifference toward facilitating educational access and mobility played a significant role in the field's racial/ethnic homogeneity. To increase practitioner diversity in the future, especially following the 2023 US Supreme Court decision (600 U.S. 181) restricting race conscious affirmative action, health professions must do more to address barriers to student access. This will involve moving away from the Flexnerian model and pursuing approaches that have helped more diverse and inclusive health professions, like nursing, to achieve greater educational opportunity and mobility.

Keywords: Health education; Physical therapy; Medicine; Nursing; Sociology of professions; Diversity and inclusion; Educational access; Career mobility; Race (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116519

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