The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia June 24 ruled to stay implementation of the portion of the Department of Education’s final rule defining “professional student” for determining federal student loan amounts under new statutory borrowing limits. The AHA in February expressed concerns about certain healthcare professions being excluded by the “professional student” definition, such as nursing, social work, physician assistant, physical therapy and occupational therapy. 

Judge Beryl A. Howell observed in the June 24 opinion that, among other potential harms, “[t]he loss of educational and vocational opportunities for prospective professional students is also detrimental to the public, particularly in underserved communities that may face a shortage of healthcare and other critical professional services.” 

Headline
The AHA and other national health care groups sent a letter to members of the House and Senate appropriations committees, urging them to provide $1.…
Headline
The Department of Education April 30 released a final rule that defines the terms “professional student” and “graduate student” to determine federal…
Headline
In this conversation, University of Illinois Chicago’s Pauline Maki, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry, psychology, and obstetrics and gynecology, and Makeba…
Headline
The National Resident Matching Program announced March 20 that it matched 41,482 medical school seniors and graduates to U.S. residency positions, filling 93.5…
Headline
The AHA commented Feb. 25 on the Department of Education’s proposed rule that would define the terms “graduate student” and “professional student” for…
Headline
The Medical Student Education Authorization Act (H.R. 5428), legislation which would authorize a federal program to provide grants through fiscal…