As a third-year WWAMI student from Soda Springs, I am writing on behalf of 18 current and former rural medicine trainees in Idaho, primarily from the TRUST program. We are concerned that House Bill 368—which the Idaho House sent to Gov. Brad Little’s desk Monday—will detrimentally impact the state’s rural physician pipeline. WWAMI, a partnership among the states of Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho, has been educating aspiring physicians from Idaho for 53 years.

Since 2013, WWAMI’s Targeted Rural and Underserved Track (TRUST) program has reserved a portion of each class for students from small towns like Cottonwood, Payette, Rockland and Victor. This program is unlike any other in the country and has established a successful pipeline for training exceptional rural physicians.

TRUST scholars spend about nine months throughout medical school embedded in rural continuity sites engaged in clinical learning experiences. This program allows them to “try on” life as a small-town doctor and is currently running in Sandpoint, Orofino, Moscow, McCall, Nampa, Hailey and Jerome.

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