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Primary Care Workforce:

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To make the case for the centrality of education to workforce dilemmas and solutions. ... Source: JAMA Medical Education Issues, Ed Salsberg, AAMC ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Primary Care Workforce:


1
Primary Care Workforce
  • Cathleen Morrow MD
  • Department of Community and Family Medicine
  • Dartmouth Medical School

2
Goals and Objectives
  • To review some background about workforce data
    nationally and in NE.
  • To attempt to create some context and perspective
    on workforce issues.
  • To make the case for the centrality of education
    to workforce dilemmas and solutions.
  • To attempt to convince you that the expansion of
    your health centers interface with education is
    in your long term interests.

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Background
  • Board of Access to Medical Education Comm of FAME
    (Finance Authority of ME)
  • Legislative Commission on Primary Care Workforce
    Development - State of NH

8
Primary Care Workforce
  • 97,752 family physicians
  • 1 for every 3, 081 persons
  • 92,257 general internists
  • 1 per 2,443 adults
  • 48,930 general pediatricians
  • 1 for 1,548 children and adolescents
  • 238,939 primary care physicians
  • 1 for every 1,260 persons

9
Primary Care Shortage?
  • Currently a problem of distribution
  • 239,000 primary care physicians (2007)
  • 1 for every 1,260 people in the US
  • Still concentrated in desirable areas
  • Relative shortage in underserved areas
  • True for physicians, NPs and Pas
  • 20 of the population living in rural areas 9
    of the doctors.

10
Primary Care Shortage
  • Real shortage and greater distribution problem
    possible
  • Substantial decline in US student interest
  • Increased reliance on international students
  • Increased interest in specialization and
    alternative careers
  • Contraction of training programs
  • Majority of PAs now sub specialize NPs?
  • Current physician expansion effort not promoting
    primary care - AAMC

11
Status check Family Medicine
Family Medicine Positions March, 2008
Filled by US Graduates
12
Reliance on International Medical Graduates
Change in Number of IMGs in Training 2002-2006
Source JAMA Medical Education Issues, Ed
Salsberg, AAMC
13
Student Interest
  • General Internal Medicine 2.0
  • Med/Peds 2.7
  • Family Medicine 4.9
  • General Pediatrics 11.7
  • Total 21.3

K. E. Hauer et al. Choices Regarding Internal
Medicine Factors Associated With Medical
Students' Career JAMA. 2008300(10)1154-1164
14
M. H. Ebell. Future Salary and US Residency Fill
Rate RevisitedJAMA. 2008300
15
Primary care losing ground GME
  • Between 2002 and 2007
  • Residency positions grew 7.9
  • Subspecialty positions grew 24.7
  • Primary care positions grew 2.3
  • Howeverthe estimated number of graduates going
    on to practice primary care fell 15 (from
    28.1 to 23.8)

E. Salsberg et al. US Residency Training Before
and After the 1997 Balanced Budget Act. JAMA.
2008300(10)1174-1180.
16
Summary
  • We may have enough primary care physicians (all
    physicians too)
  • Need to improve distribution and access
  • Pipeline in trouble for future
  • Need to fix income gap
  • Schools need to choose and train wisely
  • GME priorities, payments, and places need updating

17
Primary Care Vacancies
  • NH 17 Family physicians
  • 13 Internists
  • 12 NP/PAs
  • 5 Dentists
  • VT - 20 Family physicians
  • 9 Internists
  • 7 NP/PAs
  • 4 Pediatricians
  • 1 Dentist

18
Primary Care Vacancies
  • Maine - 50 Family physicians
  • 2 Pediatricians
  • 27 Internists
  • 9 NP/PAs

19
NH Dartmouth Residency
  • 2004 - 62
  • 2005 - 50
  • 2006 - 70
  • 2007 - 50 NH 25 Ma.
  • 2008 - 83
  • 2009 - 70 NH 30 Ma.
  • 2010 100 say they are staying.

20
More from NH Dartmouth
  • The graduates have actually mostly gone south -
    Manchester, Derry, Londonderry, Nashua, Hudson, a
    few in Concord area. One of our 2002 graduates
    went to Littleton because her family is there.
    During the resident practice management series in
    the fall of 3rd year, we have the Bi State
    Primary Care Association folks come and talk with
    them. They outline loan repayment options, talk
    about using their recruitment center, and talk
    about the north country practices

21
MMC FM Residency - Portland
  • Over the past five years
  • 75 have stayed in Maine
  • 81 have stayed in New England (including
    those who stayed in Maine)
  • Of those who stayed in Maine, 16 have gone
    to more rural (north or west) and 84 have stayed
    in Greater Portland, Lewiston, or southern Maine.

22
EMMC FM Residency - Bangor
  • Graduation year Maine Total
  • 2004 5 8
  • 2005 5 6
  • 2006 5 8
  • 2007 2 8
  • 2008 4 7
  • 2009 10 10
  • TOTAL 31 47
  • 66
  • My recollection is that we are around 50 for
    the entire life of the
  • Residency

23
CMMC Lewiston ME
  • 2005 50 ME 50 NE (Ma, VT, RI)
  • 2006 28 ME
  • 2007 65 ME
  • 2008 50 ME and NH
  • 2009 85 ME and NH
  • Graduated 1st rural track resident in 2008
    fill 2 positions/yr in Rumford, ME.

24
Maine Dartmouth FM Residency
  • 57 of graduates remain in practice in Maine
  • Overall total since the beginning of the program
    (1973)

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26
Jessie Reynolds story
  • Grew up in Indiana, small town pop 500
  • Went to Middlebury College
  • Did a Jan. term in Wells River VT with Steve
    Genereaux MD
  • Taught 7th grade science went to Indiana
    University Medical School
  • Matched in CMMC Rural Track Residency Program in
    Rumford, ME
  • Now in Wells River, VT practicing at a FQHC
    offered positions at 2 x salary.

27
Macy Foundation StudyApril 2009
  • Born in a rural area
  • 2.5x more likely to practice in rural area
  • 2x more likely to go into FM.
  • Attend a public medical school
  • 2x more likely to go into FM
  • 2x practice in rural area

28
Macy Foundation
  • NHCS recipient
  • 4x more likely to work in a FQHC
  • If you express interest in serving underserved
    pop 3 x more likely to be in a FQHC and 4x more
    likely to practice in a rural area.
  • Conclusion Rotations in these environments
    matter! Growing your own matters!

29
Workforce Future and Present
Practice Culture
Trainees Students and Residents
Patient Needs
Productivity
EHR
Regulatory Demands
30
Training Obstacles
  • Largest Lack of practicum placements no
    reimbursement, administrative costs of placement,
    slowing down already overbooked providers
    Medicare regulations regarding documentation.
  • Faculty shortages
  • EMRs- lack of standardization/ challenges for
    learners
  • Certification obstacles e.g. VA, background
    checks

31
Macy Foundation Report
  • New entities, to be called teaching community
    health centers should be established. These
    centers would serve as sites for the training of
    healthcare professionals and would work with
    primary care practices to raise standards of
    care. These teaching CHCs will require strong
    collaborative ties with teaching hospitals
    continuing the theme that collaboration is
    essential for better patient care and for
    preventing disease.

32
Educational Home
  • Create an educational environment such that
    students and learners of all kinds feel welcomed
    and embraced
  • Workforce that feels always responsible for
    teaching/learning
  • Teaching/learning is intrinsic to patient care
    patients enjoy it engage in a sense of ownership
    Im helping this student to learn, I am
    providing value here as well as obtaining medical
    care.

33
Educational Home
  • Education is so intrinsic to the environment that
    the process of permission asking is not such an
    ordeal.
  • Buy in from staff is critical.
  • Clear permissions to not engage is also critical.

34
Ideals of Learners
  • Making a difference
  • Making a difference
  • Making a difference
  • My work matters what I do is important I am
    contributing to the outcome of this patient, this
    practice, this institution, this community.

35
Positioning Your Institution
  • Pipeline development grow your own
  • Loan repayment
  • 3rd and 4th year medical student electives
  • Rural Scholars programs
  • Creating an educational home within your
    institution

36
Educational Home and Recruitment
  • Physician burnout/compassion fatigue is real.
  • Majority of people entering primary care want to
    teach.
  • The opportunity to teach offers you a recruiting
    advantage.
  • Time to teach must be a component of a realistic
    offer.

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38
Macy Foundation Report
  • AHECs should be designated and well supported to
    coordinate the educational experiences of health
    professions students and primary care residents
    in teaching CHCs and in other primary care
    community based clinical settings.

39
Macy Foundation Report
  • Title VII of the US Public Health Service Act
    must be expanded to direct more financial support
    to education in the primary care professions.

40
Macy Foundation Report
  • Private and federal insurance program payment
    policies must be changed to reduce income
    disparities between primary care providers and
    other specialists.

41
Macy Foundation Report
  • The NHSC, with substantially increased funding,
    should become a focus of efforts to alleviate the
    burden of debt that discourages medical students
    from selecting primary care as a specialty and to
    increase the numbers and diversity of primary
    care professionals who practice and teach in
    underserved communities.

42
Macy Foundation Report
  • Criteria for admission to medical school should
    be changed to attract a larger and more diverse
    mix of students who are likely to choose primary
    care and to care for patients in inner cities,
    small towns, and rural areas.

43
Macy Foundation Report
  • The graduate medical education system needs to be
    better aligned to meet the physician workforce
    needs of the country.

44
Taking Care of One Another
  • Burn-out and compassion fatigue are real and
    contributing significantly to our challenges in
    recruitment and retention.
  • An angry, resentful provider is the worst
    recruiter to primary care imaginable (and
    patients and co-workers suffer too!)
  • Our work in primary care is important, hard, and
    good work we must also take care of each other.
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