
LD 581, āAn Act to Fund the Doctors for Maine's Future Scholarship Program,ā would support the long-awarded scholarship, which lacks dedicated funding in the stateās proposed biennial budget
A delegation of future Maine physicians and leadership from the stateās only medical school at the Īį°®³Ō¹Ļ recently testified before a legislative committee in support of a crucial funding mechanism that will allow more students to pursue their medical education in the state and provide care for Mainers in the generations to come, including in underserved rural areas.
UNE College of Osteopathic Medicine students Bethany Miles (D.O., ā25) and Max Russell (D.O., ā26), alongside medical dean and Vice President for Health Affairs Jane Carreiro, D.O. ā88, testified before the Maine Legislatureās Committee on Education and Cultural Affairs on March 31, urging lawmakers to again fund the Doctors for Maineās Future Scholarship Program (LD 581).
The program, offered through the Finance Authority of Maine (FAME), has provided critical financial support to Maine medical students since its establishment in 2009. It awards upward of $25,000 annually to qualifying Maine medical students for all four years of their education, totaling up to $100,000 per recipient.
UNE medical students receiving the scholarship participate in the Dirigo Scholars track, which focuses on rural primary care workforce development through placement and clinical mentorship at Northern Light Eastern Maine Medical Center (EMMC) in Bangor.





UNE medical students ā plus students from the Tufts University School of Medicine MaineHealth Maine Medical Center Maine Track program, who also benefit from the Doctors for Maineās Future Scholarship ā testify before a legislative committee, tour the Maine State House, and meet with Maine Gov. Janet Mills.
Miles, RN, B.S.N., a fourth-year medical student from Gorham, Maine, spoke passionately about how the scholarship made it possible for her to pursue a medical education in Maine while balancing the responsibilities of being a mother.
āWhat was once an insurmountable financial hurdle became feasible for me and my family,ā she told lawmakers. āBecause of this scholarship, I have been able to complete the entirety of my medical school training in Maine. This allowed me to network and form great mentorships with Maine providers very early on, which undoubtedly played a role in my (residency placement) success.ā
Miles recently matched with Maine Medical Centerās rural psychiatry residency program, ensuring that she will remain in Maine to serve local communities. She is one of 27 total UNE medical students to match to Maine residencies during the collegeās annual Match Day celebration on March 21, where 170 future doctors gathered on UNEās Portland Campus for the Health Sciences to celebrate their residency placements.
UNEās Impact on Maineās Medical Landscape
of UNEās Doctorās for Maineās Future graduates now employed in Maine
total new UNE medical students per class starting in 2025
new doctors from the Class of 2025 completing their residencies in Maine
Carreiro, herself a 1988 graduate of UNEās medical school, reinforced the scholarship programās success in keeping physicians in the state, noting that 62% of UNEās Doctors for Maineās Future graduates are now practicing in Maine.
āThis is an effective program that attracts and retains physician talent to rural Maine communities,ā she stated. āEvery dollar from the State of Maine through FAME has to be matched by private donations, which doubles the number of scholarships that can be awarded. There are few such public-private partnerships that are more compelling or more successful.ā
The College of Osteopathic Medicine is Maineās only medical school and the premier educator of physicians for the state.
With the opening of a new medical education center on the Portland Campus for the Health Sciences ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;³Ł³ó±š Harold and Bibby Alfond Center for Health Sciences ā this summer, UNE is also expanding its medical school enrollment from 165 to 200 students per class to help address the growing shortage of physicians, eventually adding 35 more trained physicians to the workforce each year.
There are few such public-private partnerships that are more compelling or more successful.ā ā Jane Carreiro, D.O., dean of the UNE College of Osteopathic Medicine

But, as Maine continues to grapple with its current shortage of physicians, particularly in rural areas, the delegationās testimonies underscored the scholarshipās critical role in ensuring that aspiring doctors from Maine can afford medical school ā and that they remain in the state to practice.
āWithout enough doctors, people wait longer for care, travel farther for basic medical needs, and sometimes go without necessary treatment,ā said Russell, a third-year student currently training at MaineGeneral Hospital in Augusta. āThis program is not just an investment in education ā itās an investment in Maineās health, its communities, and its future.ā