"This collaboration is one of the many ways we are demonstrating our commitment to increase and expand our workforce pipelines,” said Neil Jasani, M.D., MBA, FACEP, chair of the Delaware Institute of Medical Education and Research (DIMER) Board. “This in turn, allows us to take better care for all Delawareans.”
DIMER ensures that Delaware residents have access to high-quality medical education through guaranteed admission partnerships and clinical training arrangements with the state’s major health systems. DIMER secures medical school admission opportunities for Delawareans at PCOM and the Sidney Kimmel Medical College, while Bayhealth and ChristianaCare serve as clinical training facilities where medical students complete clinical clerkships and work with trainees from a variety of residency and fellowship programs.
While the Delaware Collaborative Clinical Campus is open to all PCOM medical students, the first five students will all be DIMER medical students who are from Delaware and are returning to their home state for clinical training.
“We are so pleased to enhance training opportunities for medical students in Delaware, specifically in Kent and Sussex Counties. This reflects what we do best: partner across the state for the well-being of our communities through an exceptionally trained workforce,” said Omar Khan, M.D., MHS, FAAFP, president and CEO of the Delaware Health Sciences Alliance, which includes Bayhealth, ChristianaCare and PCOM.