Family Medicine Cares International

Compassionate care. Sustainable impact. Global learning.

Family Medicine Cares International (FMCI) is the AAFP Foundation’s humanitarian program that strengthens healthcare access and medical education in underserved communities. Through an annual delegation to the Dominican Republic, FMCI supports clinical care and builds local capacity by partnering with community-based organizations and local healthcare leaders.

Video from the 2023 FMCI Delegation to the Dominican Republic


What FMCI does

FMCI focuses on two complementary goals: delivering needed care today and supporting stronger health systems for tomorrow.

FMCI supports:

  • Clinical care

    for patients in underserved communities

  • Medical education

    and skills-building for local clinicians, students and health teams

  • Collaboration

    with trusted in-country partners to promote long-term sustainability

Program principles

  • Foster mutual partnerships with bidirectional input and learning.
  • Empower host countries and communities to define needs and guide activities.
  • Prioritize sustainability and long-term capacity building.
  • Adhere to all applicable laws, ethical standards and codes of conduct.
  • Demonstrate humility, cultural sensitivity and respect for all stakeholders.
  • Maintain accountability for all actions and outcomes.

Our impact

FMCI’s impact goes beyond a single trip—each delegation strengthens care delivery and supports the growth of local medical training.

A look at the 2024 trip:

  • 275 patients served through clinical care
  • 176 clinicians and students reached through education events and symposia
  • 17 FMCI delegates, including 5 residents, engaged in service and learning annually

Your support helps fund supplies, education events and scholarships that make this work possible.


The annual FMCI delegation

The annual delegation cohort is a one-week volunteer opportunity that includes both medical and non-medical individuals. The FMCI delegation members focus on many efforts during their time and may divide into specific teams to accomplish multiple projects. Some focus on treating patients and others on delivering medical education and training.

The Medical Education component provides resources and support for the development of family medicine through relationships with the medical schools and family medicine residency programs in the Dominican Republic. In addition to supporting the development of family medicine, this program component provides continuing medical education for family physicians and general practice physicians.

A Medical Education Team is selected in advance and may prepare (depending on the need of our in-country partners) the following in-country activities:

  • Develops and presents a one-day symposium for family medicine residents, physicians, and medical students. The symposium includes an overview of family medicine and specific medical topics as identified by in-country medical partners (residency programs and medical schools).
  • Develops and participates in discussion roundtable and faculty development sessions with medical students, residents, or faculty.

The Patient Care program component allows licensed physicians and residents (under physician supervision) to attend to or provide follow-up care to patients in the outreach Batey community clinics and the on-site primary care clinic in the Dominican Republic.

The non-clinical team provides an opportunity for non-medical delegation members to participate in meaningful volunteer activities such as:

  • Assisting the physicians with registration, patient vitals, and pharmacy in the Batey outreach clinics.
  • Delivering essential supplies and personal items for children in need.
Read how two physicians from the 2025 FMCI delegation gained new perspectives on care, community and family medicine.
Find out what’s possible abroad

Highlights from past delegations

Video from the 2022 FMCI Delegation to the Dominican Republic

  • 230 physicians, residents, students, and faculty participated in medical education events in collaboration with Universidad Central Del Este medical school.
  • 399 patient visits in the Dominican Republic Batey sugar cane community clinics.
  • 120 children of a local school received new school shoes, soccer balls, art and craft supplies, cloth drawstring bags for school supplies.

Resident scholarship

Funding is provided by the Dr. David and Karen Smith Humanitarian Fund.

The AAFP Foundation provides a scholarship for one family medicine resident to be part of the Family Medicine Cares International annual delegation cohort, February 7-14, 2026.

The scholarship covers the following:

  • Travel to the Dominican Republic, including housing and food.
  • Resident Scholar will give a presentation on the experience at AAFP FUTURE (formerly National Conference) or other appropriate setting, and expenses will be covered as part of the travel scholarship.
  • Maximum amount of travel scholarship is $5,000.

Learn more about the application process.

Image of 2026 FMCI Scholarship Recipient, Dr. Victoria Kyerematen.

Victoria Kyerematen, MD, is a Family Medicine Chief Resident at Swedish Hospital. She earned a postgraduate certificate in Medical Education from Anglia Ruskin University while serving as a teaching fellow in Chelmsford, England.

Victoria has led several educational initiatives, including simulation cases and a wellness curriculum for junior doctors. She also recently completed the ELI program, during which she designed a curriculum for primary care physicians serving new arrivals in Chicago.

Her global health experience includes research in Peru and Ghana focused on childhood development and mood disorders among women in rural communities. She has also participated in mobile health outreach in Cyprus. Locally, Victoria continues to care for underserved populations as a primary care, obstetrics and urgent care provider.


The AAFP Foundation strives to create a sense of belonging through an inclusive environment that embraces the family medicine community by recognizing individual uniqueness and contributions to family medicine.