Sunday, February 8, 2026
41.6 F
Albuquerque

11 teams secure $12 million in education grants

The American Medical Association (AMA) announced on January 13 that 11 teams from over 80 institutions will share $12 million in grants to help modernize physician education. 

Each selected grant team will receive $1.1 million over four years, funded through the Transforming Lifelong Learning Through Precision Education Grant Program. 

Grantees spanning medical schools, residency programs, health systems, and specialty societies across the country include Georgia Academy of Family Physicians, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Meritus School of Osteopathic Medicine, Mount Sinai Morningside/West, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Stanford University, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine (in collaboration with Arizona State University John Shufeldt School of Medicine and Medical Engineering), University of Hawaii – John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Illinois College of Medicine, University of Michigan, and University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. 

“Technology and AI have the potential to reshape how physicians learn, practice, and care for their patients, and these grants will help bring that potential to life,” said AMA CEO John Whyte. 

Whyte said the rise of new tools gives an opportunity to build more engaging, more adaptable, and better learning environments aligned with the realities of practicing medicine. “Our goal is to ensure that innovation strengthens the physician experience and creates a future where every physician is fully equipped to meet the needs of patients.”

Precision education, as defined by AMA, leverages data and technology, including augmented intelligence (AI), to personalize learning for each individual, ensuring the right education reaches the right learner at the right time. These systems enable medical students, residents, and practicing physicians to concentrate on developing the skills and competencies most essential for accurate diagnosis, effective communication, and patient care.

AMA chief academic officer Sanjay Desai told Fierce Healthcare that supporting innovation is a key component of the AMA’s work, and that the current education model is still burdened by “significant inefficiencies.” He stressed that the utilization of data and AI can “really transform the way we educate physicians.”

“The opportunity is to leverage this data that exists, but in the current systems, is unable to be aggregated and analyzed in a way that’s effective for learning,” Desai said. “This is what we consider to be the future of lifelong learning.”

The grantees are set to take part in a learning collaborative to share best practices for implementation, supporting the AMA’s goal of establishing interoperability standards to reduce barriers when projects are repurposed and scaled to other organizations. 

This marks the AMA’s third phase of grant funding, with awards spanning the continuum of learning, from medical students to residents to practicing physicians.

Hot this week

Is New Mexico Really Last in Education? New Data Challenge Rankings

New Mexico still ranks near the bottom in national K–12 education rankings, but recent state data show improvements in reading proficiency and mixed results across education levels.

UNM Anderson Receives Donation from Thorntons for Healthcare Leadership Scholarship

Graduate students at UNM Anderson School of Management gain a new opportunity after Maribeth and Chris Thornton’s donation to establish a Healthcare Leadership Scholarship.

New Mexico $47M Transport Funding for Safety, Climate, and Communities: Why it Matters

Nearly $47 million in transportation funding from the New Mexico Department of Transportation goes beyond roads and bridges. The projects touch daily life—making streets safer, strengthening public transit, cutting emissions, and helping rural and Tribal communities close long-standing infrastructure gaps.

School-Based Health Centers (SBHCs) Help More New Mexico Students, NMDOH Reports

New Mexico school-based health centers (SBHCs) assisted nearly 20,000 students to stay healthy and in class during the 2024-2025 school year.

Childcare Advocates Press New Mexico Senate to Protect Wage Hikes Amid Budget Standoff

Childcare advocates are calling on New Mexico senators to retain proposed wage increases for early childhood educators, warning that low pay could drive workers out of the profession as lawmakers debate funding for universal childcare.

Topics

Is New Mexico Really Last in Education? New Data Challenge Rankings

New Mexico still ranks near the bottom in national K–12 education rankings, but recent state data show improvements in reading proficiency and mixed results across education levels.

UNM Anderson Receives Donation from Thorntons for Healthcare Leadership Scholarship

Graduate students at UNM Anderson School of Management gain a new opportunity after Maribeth and Chris Thornton’s donation to establish a Healthcare Leadership Scholarship.

New Mexico $47M Transport Funding for Safety, Climate, and Communities: Why it Matters

Nearly $47 million in transportation funding from the New Mexico Department of Transportation goes beyond roads and bridges. The projects touch daily life—making streets safer, strengthening public transit, cutting emissions, and helping rural and Tribal communities close long-standing infrastructure gaps.

School-Based Health Centers (SBHCs) Help More New Mexico Students, NMDOH Reports

New Mexico school-based health centers (SBHCs) assisted nearly 20,000 students to stay healthy and in class during the 2024-2025 school year.

Childcare Advocates Press New Mexico Senate to Protect Wage Hikes Amid Budget Standoff

Childcare advocates are calling on New Mexico senators to retain proposed wage increases for early childhood educators, warning that low pay could drive workers out of the profession as lawmakers debate funding for universal childcare.

On the Heel on Infant’s Death Due to Listeria Infection, FDA Will Test Infant Formula After Botulism Outbreak Sickens Dozens of Babies

The FDA is testing infant formula and key dairy ingredients after a botulism outbreak hospitalized at least 51 babies, renewing concerns over food safety, oversight, and the risks facing infants and pregnant individuals.

Clear Horizons Act: How New Mexico’s net-zero bill might affect you and your household budget

New Mexico lawmakers are set to introduce the Clear Horizons Act, a net-zero framework that would formalize statewide emissions targets and expand planning and reporting requirements. The central consumer question is cost: how compliance, grid investment, and fuel-market exposure could translate into utility bills and price volatility. What happens next in committee—and later in rulemaking—will determine whether “affordable energy” claims show up in measurable household outcomes.

A Fun Way to Learn: NMSU Unveils ‘Market Set Go!’

The New Mexico State University (NMSU) Cooperative Extension Service has released “Market Set Go!,” an educational game that teaches food safety in a fun way.

Related Articles