There is only one primary care doctor per 2,000 patients in certain parts of the country, which the government calls ‘health professional shortage areas,’ according to Medill Reports. ‘Health professionals worry there will be an even greater shortage after 2014 when about 32 million more people are insured, as mandated by the health care reform law and as the baby boomer generation becomes Medicare-aged’ (Adorka, 4/13). The Associated Press: Twenty-eight states are considering changing rules to allow nurse practitioners to practice independently as a means of combating the shortage of physicians. The 32 million expected ‘newly insured patients will be looking for doctors and may find nurses instead.’ But, the ‘medical establishment is fighting to protect turf. ¦ The American Medical Association, which supported the national health care overhaul, says a doctor shortage is no reason to put nurses in charge and endanger patients.’ Nurses argue that criticism is unfounded – plus, they charge less (Johnson, 4/13).
Wednesday, April 21st, 2010
Physician Shortage Expected To Deepen With Health Overhaul
Author:
Source: The Medical News
Publication Date: 15. April 2010 01:05
Link: Physician Shortage Expected To Deepen With Health Overhaul
Source: The Medical News
Publication Date: 15. April 2010 01:05
Link: Physician Shortage Expected To Deepen With Health Overhaul
Stephan: An unintended consequence of health reform is that by bringing into coverage 30 million new people we will be forced to face the shortage of family practitioners, the front line docs who have been turned into uber-technician employees of the Illness Profit system.
What few in the general public have realized is that one of the unintended consequences of allowing our healthcare to develop as it has, since the Nixon Administration sold healthcare to corporations, is that it has created hellish conditions for primary care physicians. Not surprisingly they are quiting in droves even as fewer and fewer newly minted physicians choose this specialty.