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  • Press Release

    AAMC Releases Strategic Plan for a Healthier Future

    Media Contacts

    Stuart Heiser, Senior Media Relations Specialist

    Plan Outlines a Bold Path to Improve the Health of People Everywhere

    The AAMC (Association of American Medical Colleges) today released its new strategic plan, “A Healthier Future for All.” The plan provides a path forward to rethink the nation’s approach to health; make health care more equitable, affordable, and available to all; strengthen the nation’s medical education system and commitment to medical research; and increase the diversity of the physician and medical research workforce.

    Developed in partnership by the AAMC Board of Directors and Leadership Team with extensive input from the broad community of academic medicine and AAMC staff, the plan lays out a new mission statement in which the AAMC “leads and serves the academic medicine community to improve the health of people everywhere” and 10 plans of action to achieve the association’s vision of “a healthier future through learning, discovery, health care, and community collaborations.” Begun in September 2019, the plan was informed by lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic and public health crisis.

    In a message to AAMC members today, President and CEO David J. Skorton, MD, said, “I am so proud of the academic medicine community and the way you have responded to the novel coronavirus pandemic and defined the front lines of the response. You have truly shown the nation and the world our very best. And yet, as heroic and exceptional as the response has been, the pandemic also exposed the fault lines in our health care system tremendous health inequities and disparities, too many people who still lack access to health care, and the continuing epidemic of mental health challenges, to name but a few. Fundamentally, for too many, our nation’s approach to health is broken. More than ever before, it is clear we must do better.”

    The new AAMC plan focuses on evolving the nation’s system of medical education; supporting students in their journeys to become medical professionals; helping the nation’s medical schools, teaching hospitals, and health systems become more inclusive and equitable; increasing significantly the number of diverse medical students and matriculants; strengthening the nation’s commitment to medical research and the research workforce; improving access to health care; enhancing the skills and capacity of the people of academic medicine; and helping the AAMC adapt to change.

    In addition, the plan creates two new entities within the AAMC: 1) the AAMC Research and Action Institute, which will elevate the association’s role in policy research and analysis, and 2) the AAMC Center for Health Justice, to amplify the association’s critically important efforts to address health inequities and advance health justice as part of its new mission area of community collaborations.

    “The nation faces many seemingly intractable challenges in health care. As the only association dedicated to transforming health through medical education, health care, medical research, and community collaborations, the AAMC is prepared to tackle these challenges and lead the way to a healthier future,” Skorton said.

    To learn more about the new AAMC strategic plan, visit strategicplan.aamc.org.

    Click here for background about the association’s strategic planning process.


    The AAMC (Association of American Medical Colleges) is a nonprofit association dedicated to improving the health of people everywhere through medical education, health care, medical research, and community collaborations. Its members are all 158 U.S. medical schools accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education; 13 accredited Canadian medical schools; approximately 400 academic health systems and teaching hospitals, including Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers; and more than 70 academic societies. Through these institutions and organizations, the AAMC leads and serves America’s medical schools, academic health systems and teaching hospitals, and the millions of individuals across academic medicine, including more than 193,000 full-time faculty members, 96,000 medical students, 153,000 resident physicians, and 60,000 graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in the biomedical sciences. Following a 2022 merger, the Alliance of Academic Health Centers and the Alliance of Academic Health Centers International broadened participation in the AAMC by U.S. and international academic health centers.