Many aspects of the medical profession in North America changed following the
Flexner Report. Medical training adhered more closely to the scientific method and became grounded in human physiology and
biochemistry. Medical research aligned more fully with the protocols of scientific research. Average physician quality significantly increased.
Medical school closings Flexner wanted to improve both the admissions standards of medical school and the quality of medical education itself. He recognized that many of the medical schools had inadequate admissions requirements and a lack of adequate education. Consequently, Flexner sought to reduce the number of medical schools in the United States. A majority of American institutions granting
MD or
DO degrees as of the date of the
Report (1910) closed within two to three decades. (In Canada, only the medical school at
Western University was deemed inadequate, but none was closed or merged subsequent to the Report.) In 1904, before the
Report, there were 160 MD-granting institutions with more than 28,000 students. By 1920, after the
Report, there were only 85 MD-granting institutions, educating only 13,800 students. By 1935, there were only 66 medical schools operating in the United States. Between 1910 and 1935, more than half of all American medical schools merged or closed. The dramatic decline was in some part due to the implementation of the Report's recommendation that all
"proprietary" schools be closed and that medical schools should henceforth all be connected to universities. Of the 66 surviving MD-granting institutions in 1935, 57 were part of a university. An important factor driving the mergers and closures of medical schools was the national regulation and enforcement of medical school criteria: All state medical boards gradually adopted and enforced the
Report 's recommendations. In response to the
Flexner Report, some schools fired senior faculty members as part of a process of reform and renewal.
Impact on the role of physician The vision for medical education described in the
Flexner Report narrowed medical schools' interests to disease, moving away from an interest on the system of health care or society's health beyond disease.
Preventive medicine and
population health were not considered a responsibility of physicians, bifurcating "health" into two separate fields:
scientific medicine and
public health.
Impact on African-American doctors and patients The
Flexner Report has been criticized for introducing policies that encouraged
systemic racism . Flexner advocated for the closing of all but two of the
historically black medical schools. As a result, only
Howard University College of Medicine and
Meharry Medical College were left open, while five other schools were closed. Flexner emphasized his view that black doctors should treat only black patients and should play roles subservient to those of white physicians. Flexner promoted the idea that African American medical students should be trained in "hygiene rather than surgery" and be employed as "sanitarians," with a primary role to protect white Americans from disease. Flexner stated in the
Report: Flexner argued that African American physicians should be educated in order to stop the transmission of diseases among African Americans and to prevent the contamination of white people from those same diseases. The closure of the five schools, and the fact that black students were not admitted to many U.S. medical schools for the 50 years following the
Flexner Report, has contributed to the low numbers of American-born physicians of color as the ramifications are still felt, more than a century later. Tens of thousands of African American physicians disappeared as a result of the
Flexner Report. In response to the racist writings of the
Flexner Report, the AAMC decided to rename the prestigious Abraham Flexner award in 2020.
Impact on women The Flexner Report has also been criticized for introducing policies that encouraged sexism, Before the publication of the
Flexner Report, in the mid-to-latter part of the nineteenth century, universities had just begun opening and expanding female admissions as part of both women's and
co-educational facilities with the founding of
co-educational
Oberlin College in 1833 and private all-women's colleges such as
Vassar College and
Pembroke College. Furthermore, many women opened their own medical schools for women as a response to other medical schools refusing to admit them. In the
Report, Flexner noted that there were few women in medical education. Flexner clearly doubted the scientific validity of all forms of medicine other than that based on scientific research, deeming any approach to medicine that did not advocate the use of treatments such as vaccines to prevent and cure illness as tantamount to quackery and charlatanism. Medical schools that offered training in various disciplines including
electromagnetic field therapy,
phototherapy,
eclectic medicine, physiomedicalism,
naturopathy, and
homeopathy, were told either to drop these courses from their curriculum or lose their accreditation and underwriting support. A few schools resisted for a time, but eventually most schools for alternative medicine complied with the
Report or shut their doors.
Impact on osteopathic medicine While almost all the alternative medical schools listed in the
Flexner Report were closed, the
American Osteopathic Association (AOA) brought a number of osteopathic medical schools into compliance with Flexner's recommendations to produce an evidence-based approach and practice. Today, the curricula of DO- and MD-awarding medical schools are now
nearly identical, the chief difference being the additional instruction in osteopathic schools of
osteopathic manipulative medicine. ==See also==