Medical Education
Medical Education

Health Justice Scholars Track

Medical students and Law students pose together in front of the Capitol Building after Capitol Hill Day

Med and Law Students outside Capitol Hill in 2023

Human progress is neither automatic nor inevitable . . . Every step toward the goal of justice requires sacrifice, suffering, and struggle; the tireless exertions and passionate concern of dedicated individuals.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 

Introduction & Overview

Our Mission

To provide future physicians with key knowledge needed to practice medicine through a health justice and racial equity lens. Taking a distinctly inter-professional approach to the practice of medicine, participants collaborate with legal and policy advocates and learn how to use law and policy as tools to improve individual health and wellbeing, transform the systems used to deliver healthcare, and advance broader population health and equity goals.

Our Vision

Empower the next generation of physicians to be advocates for health justice for their patients, within the healthcare system, and on behalf of their communities.

Our Purpose

To provide future physicians with the knowledge and skills they need to practice holistic, collaborative care aimed at addressing the health justice gaps that disproportionately impact intentionally and historically marginalized patients and contribute to health disparities.

Why Health Justice? Sobering Facts About Washington, D.C.

Addressing complex issues requires aspiring physicians to have knowledge, skills and empathy beyond what is needed to achieve clinical competency. Consider these facts about health and equity in Washington, DC:

The Health Justice Scholars Track at Georgetown

The Health Justice Scholar (HJS) Track at the Georgetown University School of Medicine offers a unique longitudinal learning experience for medical students who have a passion for social justice and health advocacy. The HJS Track is grounded in cura personalis, Latin for “care for the whole person,” a core Jesuit value that is reflected in Georgetown’s unique medical educational experience.

Established in 2008, the HJS Track recognizes that physicians alone cannot guarantee overall health and well-being for patients. Embracing an expansive and multidisciplinary approach to healthcare, the HJS Track empowers students with the understanding and tools they need to address the social, legal, racial, economic, and other structural barriers to health they will encounter throughout their professional lives. Through theoretical and experiential learning, HJS Track students learn about health justice as an advocacy objective and how to address social drivers of health at the individual, systems, and population levels.

The HJS Track is part of the Georgetown University Health Justice Alliance, a robust academic medical-legal partnership between Georgetown’s Medical and Law Centers and MedStar Health (Georgetown’s academic health system partner). The Health Justice Alliance contributes directly to mentorship, applied advocacy experiences, research, and unique inter-professional experiences for Track students all within a community of like-minded peers intent on advancing health equity.

Medical students encounter many formative experiences throughout their four years of study– ones that will introduce them to new ideas and concepts, deeply challenging and emboldening their values, and further shaping their professional identities. No great practitioner becomes great without continual reflection on how the experiences, knowledge, and people they encounter affect their identity, values, and practice. The goal of the HJS Track is to further this development by creating physicians who are compassionate providers and skilled advocates for health justice.

Students who complete all requirements receive special distinction at graduation as Health Justice Scholars. Scholars graduate with the knowledge and skills that empower them to embody the dual roles of clinician and patient advocate in their future careers as physicians.

Enrollment

Curriculum Overview

  1. First-Year Foundational Health Justice Seminars
  2. Second-Year Capitol Hill Day Program with Law Students
  3. Annual Participation in Health Justice Week
  4. Fourth-Year Interprofessional Advocacy Elective
  5. Final Health Justice Project/Presentation

Learning Objectives

By the completion of this scholarly track, students will be able to:

Contribution to GUSOM Core Competencies

Participation in this track contributes to some of the core competencies required for graduation from Georgetown University School of Medicine including the ability to:

Contact Information

Faculty & Staff