The National Physician Shortfall: Congress Steps Into the Breach.

As recently as November 2024, the National Center for Health Workforce Analysis (NCHWA) of the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) made note of the latest census data of U.S. physicians [1]. It was the conclusion of the NCHWA that the U.S. is presently home to a total of 933,788 "professionally active" physicians of whom 800,355 are "reported as patient care practicing physicians [1]." The NCHWA went on to project a "shortage of 187,130 full-time equivalent (FTE) physicians in 2037" as well as the possibility that "nonmetro areas will experience greater shortages of physicians than metro areas [1]." The NCHWA further estimates that "75 million people live in a primary care Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA)" and that "a total of 122 million people live in a mental health HPSA [1]." Note was also made of the reality that "the maldistribution of the health care workforce results in severe shortages in rural communities [1]." Seeking to address the extant challenges, a bipartisan group of members of the Senate Committee on Finance stepped into the breach [2]. Led by Sen. Ron L. Wyden (D-OR), it was the intent of the Senators to introduce legislation that will assist teaching hospitals in the training of more physicians by reforming Medicare's Graduate Medical Education (GME) rules [2]. In this Commentary, we review the evolution of the aforementioned draft legislation as well as assess the likelihood of the materialization thereof.
Mental Health
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Authors

Adashi Adashi, Cohen Cohen
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