Feature Story | 24-Jan-2024

First Primary Care Physician Scholarship recipients return to practice in Arizona

Dawn Bowling, MD, Megan Kelly, MD, and George Nguyen, MD, are giving back by providing care for Arizonans in underserved rural and urban communities.

University of Arizona Health Sciences

The first three recipients of the University of Arizona Health Sciences Primary Care Physician Scholarship program are fulfilling their commitments to practice primary care in Arizona.

Dawn Bowling, MDMegan Kelly, MD, and George Nguyen, MD, all completed their residencies last summer and accepted positions as primary care physicians in Arizona.

“For many years, Arizona has faced a growing need for more primary care physicians, especially in medically underserved urban and rural areas,” said Michael D. Dake, MD, senior vice president for the University of Arizona Health Sciences. “The Primary Care Physician Scholarship program was built to help fill this need and improve access to care for all Arizonans. We are so proud to see the first of our PCP Scholarship recipients return to Arizona. We know they will have an immediate and positive impact as doctors.”

Bowling entered the Primary Care Physician Scholarship Program in 2019 as a fourth-year medical student at the UArizona College of Medicine – Tucson. In September, she joined the Kingman Regional Medical Center in Kingman, Arizona.

“I have built relationships in the community that can be essential for my patients,” Nguyen said. “I recently had a female patient who is a domestic violence survivor. I was able to connect her with a nearby woman’s leadership program that I have a relationship with. Even though it is outside the scope of medicine per se, we as primary care providers can go above and beyond that to connect our patients with community resources that are going to help them.”

The Primary Care Physician Scholarship Program is currently supporting 92 active medical students. An additional 45 scholarship recipients have graduated and are in various stages of residency training.

Developed in partnership with and funded by a portion of $8 million approved by the Arizona Legislature in 2019, the Primary Care Physician Scholarship program addresses two critical issues in health care: Arizona’s shortage of primary care physicians and a rising amount of debt for medical students. In exchange for free tuition, primary care physician scholarship recipients agree to practice primary care in a rural or urban underserved community in Arizona.

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