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Certify Medical Students to Respond to National Crises To the Editor: The COVID-19 pandemic has stretched health systems to their breaking point. And yet, many advanced medical students have been kept away from hospitals, underused in a time of critical need, and unable to take advantage of invaluable learning opportunities. Now is the time to rethink the current structure of the health care system and to implement a national, formalized structure that incorporates medical students into future health care responses to disasters, pandemics, acts of terror, and the like. Despite the amount of training and the formal examinations that students undergo, fourth-year medical students are technically only as qualified as entering first-year students. Medical students take and must pass 3 different licensing examinations during their schooling. Supplementing preclinical learning with practical skills training, such as airway management, IV placement, and wound stabilization, could equip medical students to serve an important new role in the response to disasters. As students progress through their training, they should gradually accumulate skills and corresponding certifications to perform vital health care functions, in contrast to the current all-or-nothing model of medical licensing. At a small number of medical schools, first-year medical students already train and become certified as emergency medical technicians to supplement their preclinical years with experience in the field.1 We propose adapting such a model to develop a new disaster response certification for medical students to help meet the needs of the country during times of strain on the health care system. The skills held under this medical student certification should be determined by a panel of experts, including experienced disaster relief and public health officials, to maximize utility during a wide range of national crises. A national registry of medical students with disaster certification could be maintained and updated (e.g., clerkship and board examination completion, current location) so that they are easily called to action. Participation in any relief efforts could be kept voluntary, but certification would ease the process of deploying willing medical students. Pandemics and other disasters are exactly the problems we signed up to tackle when we committed our professional lives to medicine. This is a critical time for our generation to contribute to the relief effort and gain the skills to lead the way in the future. Jennifer FrankeSecond-year medical student, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7909-9303.John BliamptisSecond-year medical student, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.Leigh AlonFirst-year medical student, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; Lalon2@jhmi.edu; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6452-5058. Disclosures: None reported.

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last updated at 2021-06-04 21:07:55 UTC

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