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Yale/Stanford Global Health Scholars Program

The Yale/Stanford Global Health Scholars Program annually selects up to 40 physicians during their residencies and career physicians for six-week rotations at one of our mentored partnership sites outside the U.S. Rotations are largely directed at clinical experiences, service, and teaching, as opposed to research.

Yale/Stanford Global Health Scholars receive, upon completion of the rotation, a travel award based on their site assignment. This financial support serves as partial reimbursement for travel and living expenses incurred during the rotation. All Scholars are required to participate in program evaluation upon completion of the rotation.

About Us

By placing physicians in the developing world, we hope to instill a sense of global citizenry...

The Yale University International Health Program was founded in 1981 by Drs. Michele Barry and Frank Bia to inspire a more global vision of health care in a traditional internal medicine residency program. By placing physicians trained in the US face-to-face with the broad range of health care needs in the developing world, the Yale International Health Program (IHP) hoped to instill a sense of global citizenry and create local and international community activists in health.

The Yale/Stanford Global Health Scholars Program was conceived in 2001 with the goals of expanding the existing Yale IHP to physicians in residency training from leading U.S. hospitals and universities, and offering overseas opportunities to more experienced career physicians. The program selected the most promising residents and career physicians, primarily from Yale and Stanford, to rotate to one of our carefully selected sites overseas. The program now incorporates building educational capacity with these partners.

In addition, this program maintains a strong alumni network to promote future partnerships between host countries, universities, and physician scholars in international health.

During the past 40 years, over 1,500 medical residents and career physicians have participated in this unique program by working and teaching in underserved areas throughout the world. These rotations offer unusual opportunities for residents to enrich their knowledge and practice of medicine in settings with few resources. A study of Yale graduates of this program confirmed that IHP physicians were more likely than their counterparts to demonstrate social concern within their clinical practices as measured by their commitment to serve poor and immigrant populations.

Contacts

  • Co-Director

    Associate Professor of Medicine (General Medicine) and Clinical Professor of Nursing; Director, Office of Global Health, Internal Medicine; Program Co-Director, Global Health Ethics Program, Yale Institute for Global Health; Founding Member/Core Faculty, Women's & Gender Health Education Program, Internal Medicine; Director, Global Health & Equity Distinction Pathway, Internal Medicine; Affiliated Faculty, Program for Biomedical Ethics; Affiliated Faculty, Yale Center for Asylum Medicine, Internal Medicine; Affiliated Faculty, Yale Institute for Global Health; Director for Global and Community Health, Yale Primary Care Internal Medicine Residency Program, Internal Medicine; Uganda Collaboration Director, Yale/Stanford Global Health Scholars Program