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Kaiser Health News: Three Major Southern Newspapers Report Physician Shortages
Cheree Cleghorn | July 6, 2009

Yesterday’s story included the fact that the 2008 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission Report did not find statistical evidence that older patients were having difficulty finding primary care physicians.

This round-up of stories, all from Southern newpapers, points to shortages in that region, especially in rural areas, as noted by the Raleigh News and Observer.

Kaiser Health News

The number of new primary care doctors each year has fallen nearly 50 percent since 1997, the Dallas Morning News reports, leaving a shortage that could hinder Congress’s ambition to reform health care and cover millions of uninsured Americans. One cause of the shortage is that primary care doctors earn less – the average pediatrician makes $171,000 compared with $480,000 for orthopedic surgeons, according to one study – but must pay back medical school debts similar to those drawn by their higher-paid colleagues. As a result the higher paid specialists outnumber primary care physicians 2 to 1 (Roberson, 7/6).

“Simply put, there aren’t enough primary-care doctors… to meet the demand of American now, much less the 46 million uninsured people,” the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot reports. “The national situation is dire enough that federal officials and legislators are proposing solutions, including: granting medical-school debt relief to students entering primary care; retooling the insurance system to better compensate primary-care doctors; and expanding the National Health Service Corps, which funds doctors and nurses in rural areas and poor neighborhoods” (Simpson, 7/5).

“While fast-growing cities have drawn a surplus of specialists and too few primary care doctors, much of the primary care decline has fallen on rural areas, the Raleigh News & Observer. The paper adds: “The hours are long and unpredictable. In rural communities, family doctors can be on call perpetually. Their local hospitals seldom have staff doctors, so when their patients are admitted, they often must travel miles from their homes and offices to make rounds” (Avery, 7/5). ”

Source: Kaiser Health News, July 6, 2009

Source: Dallas Morning News, July 6, 2009

Source: Norfolk Virginian Pilot, July 5, 2009

Source: Raleigh News and Observer, July 5, 2009


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