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POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS for the EVOLVING PHYSICIAN SHORTAGE

POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS for the EVOLVING PHYSICIAN SHORTAGE. Richard A. Cooper, M.D . Florida Board of Governors Orlando March 17, 2004. POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS for the EVOLVING PHYSICIAN SHORTAGE

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  1. POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS for the EVOLVING PHYSICIAN SHORTAGE Richard A. Cooper, M.D. Florida Board of Governors Orlando March 17, 2004

  2. POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Expand the infrastructure for undergraduate medical education ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Expand the applicant pool ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Expand residency (GME) training programs ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Increase the number of International Medical Graduates ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Increase the utilization of nonphysician clinicians ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Streamline the processes of care ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Improve the legal and regulatory environment for medical practice ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  3. EXPANSION OF MEDICAL SCHOOLS

  4. MEDICAL SCHOOLS, MATRICULANTS and GRADUATES, 1940-2002Allopathic and Osteopathic 1935-1940 = 1.0

  5. CONTRIBUTIONS TO INCREASED NUMBERS OF MD MATRICULANTS AND GRADUATES, 1960 vs. 1980 15% 54% 45% 46% 40%

  6. DEANS’ SURVEYEXPANSION CAPACITY OF EXISTING MEDICAL SCHOOLS

  7. SATELLITES and BRANCHES

  8. SATELLITE CAMPUSES Expand educational capacity of school Distant from main campus Separate administrative structure Significant educational components Most developed in 1960s and 1970s 28 schools with satellite clinical campuses 6 schools with satellite preclinical campuses

  9. BRANCH CAMPUSES ALLOPATHIC MEDICAL SCHOOLS U of I branch at Urbana, Rockford, Peoria Cleveland clinic branch of Case-Western Reserve OSTEOPATHIC MEDICAL SCHOOLS Touro University (CA) branch at Las Vegas, NV Philadelphia COM (PA) branch at Atlanta, GA Lake Erie COM (PA) branch at Bradenton, FL Western University (CA) branch planned ? where

  10. APPLICANTS

  11. BACHELOR’S GRADUATES and MEDICAL APPLICANTS 1940-2001 • Medical • Applicants • 50,000 • -40,000 • -30,000 • -20,000 • -10,000 • - 0 NCES/AAMC

  12. BACHELOR’S DEGREES 1920 to 2000 Vietnam Draft ~1M (14%) of the 7M men who attended college during the Vietnam draft 1963-1978 GI Bill 2.0M of the 3.4M who attended institutions of higher education under the GI Bill 1945-1965 NCES, Table 171

  13. FIRST-TIME ALLOPATHIC MEDICAL SCHOOL APPLICANTSas a PERCENTAGE of BACCALAUREATE DEGREES1961-2001 AAMC/NCES

  14. WHITE MALEBACHELOR’S DEGREES AND FIRST-TIME MEDICAL APPLICANTS1977-2000

  15. WHITE FEMALEBACHELOR’S DEGREES AND FIRST-TIME MEDICAL APPLICANTS1977-2000

  16. ASIANBACHELOR’S DEGREES AND FIRST-TIME MEDICAL APPLICANTS1977-2000

  17. BLACKBACHELOR’S DEGREES AND FIRST-TIME MEDICAL APPLICANTS1977-2000

  18. STUDENTS MUST GRADUATE FROM HIGH SCHOOL TO GO TO COLLEGE ….BUT EVEN THEN, THEY MIGHT NOT

  19. HIGH SCHOOL COMPLETERS 1967-2000 Census Bureau Table A-5

  20. BACHELOR’S DEGREES PER CAPITAPer 1,000 21-year olds

  21. RELATIVE PROPORTIONS of WHITES, ASIANS, BLACKS and HISPANICSVARIOUS LEVELS OF EDUCATION, 1999-2000 Bureau of the Census, NCES, AAMC

  22. BACHELOR’S GRADUATES 1961-2001 and projected to 2012 Projected NCES

  23. Sufficient for 5,000 additional medical school acceptances at the margin FIRST-TIME MD APPLICANTS1961-2001 and extrapolated to 2020Smoothed Trend

  24. GME CHALLENGES ------------------------------------ 1. Creating sufficient numbers of high quality positions.2. Limitations of Balanced Budget Act of 1997” Positions frozen at 1996 levels.3. Budget implications of additional positions: Each new PGY-1 position will obligate Medicare to $35,000 in DME payments per year for an average of 4.5 years). 5,000 positions = $800M If IME payments are also allowed, each new first year position will obligate Medicare to an additional $75,000 for 4.5 years. 5,000 positions = $1.5B Total increase in Medicare GME at current rates would be: 5,000 positions = $2.3B

  25. INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL GRADUATES

  26. IMGs(all years)Citizenship or Visa Status Corrected for unknown

  27. NON-US IMGsIndia, No Africa, Middle East vs the Rest of the World

  28. IMG CHALLENGES ConcernsUS-IMGs vs. Foreign IMGsQuality of educational programsRate of disciplinary actionsHurdlesUSMLE Steps 1, 2, 3Clinical Skills Assessment (CSA) (cost, time)Visas to take CSA examVisas to enter for residencyDecreased availability of H1b visas (195K in 2003  65K in 2004)CompetitionEnglandCanadaAttractiveness of native countries

  29. POTENTIALS and LIMITATIONS ofNONPHYSICIAN CLINICIANS

  30. OVERLAPPING RESPONSIBILITIES OFPHYSICIANS AND NONPHYSICIAN CLINICIANS PHYSICIANS COMPLEX CARE MULTISYSTEM DISEASE CARE CHRONIC DISEASE MANAGEMENT MINOR and SELF-LIMITED DISORDERS SYMPTOM CONTROL WELLNESS CARE and PREVENTION COUNSELING and EDUCATION NONPHYSICIAN CLINICIANS

  31. PROCESSES of CAREBetter information managementStreamlined flow of careSafer technologiesvs. Onerous federal regulationIntrusive managed care review Crippling malpractice litigation (Tort reform)

  32. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10-15Expand the infrastructure for undergraduate medical education ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10-15Expand the applicant pool ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5-10Expand residency (GME) training programs ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5-10Increase the number of International Medical Graduates ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5-10 Increase the utilization of nonphysician clinicians ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Now Streamline the processes of care ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Now Improve the legal and regulatory environment for medical practice ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TIME FRAME OF POTENTIAL IMPACT

  33. RECOMMENDATIONS _______________________________________________ • Begin immediately to expand the infrastructure for undergraduate medical education. • Expand residency training opportunities, especially in the non-primary care specialties. • Foster continued development of opportunities for NPs and other NPCs, particularly in primary care. • Examine the global impact of a continued dependence on IMGs. • Review the factors that affect practice efficiency and professional satisfaction among physicians.

  34. Thank you.

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