American medicine is a market with tightly restricted entry, at all levels. Proposed legislation offers a glimpse: Bill Would Create More Medical-Residency Slots, Potentially Easing Physician Shortage
"Legislation introduced in Congress on Monday would expand the number of
Medicare-sponsored training slots for new doctors by 15,000, a step that two
medical-education groups said would go a long way toward easing a projected
shortage of physicians.
"The bill, the Physician Shortage Reduction and Graduate Medical Education
Accountability and Transparency Act (HR 6352), is sponsored by Rep. Aaron
Schock, an Illinois Republican, and Rep. Allyson Schwartz, a Pennsylvania
Democrat.
"Medical schools have been expanding
their enrollments and new schools have been opening up as concerns have
grown about a shortage that could reach more than 90,000 physicians by 2020,
according to the Association of American Medical Colleges.
"Those worries have intensified with passage of the Affordable
Care Act, which will greatly increase the number of people seeking medical
care by providing insurance coverage to 32 million more people.
"But while more students are making their way through the medical-school
pipeline, they're likely to run into bottlenecks because of a cap on the number
of Medicare-supported residency training slots that Congress imposed in
1997."
Saturday, September 8, 2012
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