“…22-23 The first study by McDougle, et al found that physicians who were graduates of Ohio State University’s (OSU’s) PBP were more likely than their control group counterparts to be practicing medicine in federally designated medically underserved areas (29.4% versus 5.1%, p≤.01) or to be providing services where 40% or more of the patients were medically indigent or poor (67.6% versus 33.3%, p≤.01). 22 The second study by Lupton, et al, found that alumni from five premedical postbaccalaureate programs across the University of California system (UCPB) were more likely than their control group counterparts to enter primary care (53.1% versus 40.1%, p≤.001), and work in high-poverty communities (16.2% versus 8.7%, p≤.05), high-Latino communities (18.3% versus 8.7%, p≤.01), or high-African American communities (29.8% versus 19.8%, p≤.02). 23 …”