Program History
In 1988, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation established
the Minority Medical Education Program (MMEP) to increase the number of highly
qualified medical school applicants from minority groups that were underrepresented
in medicine—primarily African Americans, Hispanics, and American Indians.
MMEP supported six medical schools in offering a free, six-week medical school
preparatory program. The Association of American Medical Colleges assumed the
role of National Program Office for MMEP in 1993.
Over the years, MMEP's intensive academic preparation
program expanded to 11 campuses. In addition, the program broadened its initial
focus on specific minority groups to include students who were from rural areas,
economically disadvantaged, and came from groups that have historically received
substandard health care regardless of their racial or ethnic background.
In 2003, the program changed its name to the Summer Medical
Education Program (SMEP), reflecting the inclusion of students representing
a wide range of economic, cultural, racial, and ethnic diversity. The new Summer
Medical and Dental Education Program (SMDEP) builds on the lessons learned from
those earlier programs. It is now expanding to include pre-dental students who
face challenges similar to those of pre-medical students, and it focuses on
students in the first two years of their college education because the experience
of previous programs indicates that this is when students derive the most benefit.
|