Report: Number of Primary Care Doctors in the United States Down

Fewer American doctors are focusing on primary care, but the decline is being covered by physicians from other countries. The General Accountability Office said that as of 2006 there were 22,146 American doctors in residency programs in the United States specializing in primary care. That was down from 23,801 in 1995, the research arm of Congress told the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. “It is troubling to me that the number of Americans pursuing a career in primary care has declined,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. Overall growth in the number of primary-care physicians “has been totally due to the number of international medical students training in America,” Sanders said. “We are increasingly dependent on international medical school graduates to meet our needs. Currently, one in four new physicians in the U.S. is an international medical graduate.” In its report on primary-care providers, GAO said the number of international medical graduates training in primary care had grown from 13,025 in 1995 to 15,565 in 2006. For specialists, the number of Americans in training went from 45,300 in 1995 to 47,575 in 2006 and over the same period international specialists grew from 11,957 to 12,611, GAO said.

To read the Associated Press article, please click on the link below:

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gPkJfzXhY8PFRbJbKPY4AS8rMOFwD8UP1C900

For more information on defending medical malpractice, nursing home and general liability matters in Florida contact Howard Citron at Citron & Associates, P.A. – www.citronlegal.com.

2 Responses to “Report: Number of Primary Care Doctors in the United States Down”

  1. jaysi Says:

    do you know how many primary care physicians there currently are in the united states?
    thanks
    jaysi

  2. Bob Schmidt Says:

    I had the same question. Did you get an answer as to how many PCPs there are in the US?
    Bob Schmidt

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