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The Recovery Room 001: Physician Shortage (Re-Broadcast)

From: WDAV Classical Public Radio
Series: The Recovery Room
Length: 28:58

Health care reform offers the promise of primary care to millions of uninsured Americans. The problem? There's already a critical shortage of primary care physicians. Host Dr. Rick Greene talks with a pair of public health experts about the shortage, and with a general surgeon facing burn-out in rural North Carolina. Read the full description.

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Segment 1: Physician Shortage, Part 1 [1:30-12:28]

Guest: Dr. Tom Ricketts, Professor of Health Policy and Management at UNC Chapel Hill and the Deputy Director of UNC’s Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research.

2025 isn’t so far away. And if the Association of American Medical Colleges is correct, we’ll be facing a shortage of at least 124 thousand physicians in 15 short years. Docs who provide the most basic medical needs – primary care physicians and general surgeons – are already in the shortest supply.  

Two big factors are contributing to the shortage: there simply aren’t enough doctors in the pipeline to meet the needs of a growing population, and doctors in training are overwhelmingly choosing specialties and sub-specialties over those areas of medicine that are in the greatest demand – primary care and general surgery. Unfortunately, it’s no easy fix. And with the country getting bigger, older, and more obsee - and the pool of doctors getting smaller - it’s a crisis in the making.  

Segment 2: Physician Shortage, Part 2 [12:47-20:11]

Guest: Dr. Harold Sox, Professor emeritus of medicine at The Dartmouth Institute in Hanover, NH, and the former editor of The Annals of Internal Medicine.

The number of American medical students choosing primary care is half what it was in 1997 and as many as 50% of primary care providers have stopped taking new patients. If we’re facing a shortage of the doctors we see most what’s being done about it?

Segment 3: The Rural Surgeon [20:27-28:00] 

Guest: Dr. Henry Fleishmann, Surgeon

To get a sense of the pressures that are driving doctors-in-training out of primary care and general surgery and into higher-paying specialties and sub-specialties, look no further than the rural surgeon. And look while you can, because its showing signs of disappearing altogether. 300 US counties lost all their surgeons in the last five years and 900 counties have no surgeons whatsoever. 

Eden, NC, has a population of 15,000. It’s located in Rockingham County in central North Carolina, about 30 miles south of the Virginia border. Dr. Henry Fleishmann is one of two practicing surgeons in Eden. He’s lived and worked in the city for 31 years.

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Piece Description

Segment 1: Physician Shortage, Part 1 [1:30-12:28]

Guest: Dr. Tom Ricketts, Professor of Health Policy and Management at UNC Chapel Hill and the Deputy Director of UNC’s Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research.

2025 isn’t so far away. And if the Association of American Medical Colleges is correct, we’ll be facing a shortage of at least 124 thousand physicians in 15 short years. Docs who provide the most basic medical needs – primary care physicians and general surgeons – are already in the shortest supply.  

Two big factors are contributing to the shortage: there simply aren’t enough doctors in the pipeline to meet the needs of a growing population, and doctors in training are overwhelmingly choosing specialties and sub-specialties over those areas of medicine that are in the greatest demand – primary care and general surgery. Unfortunately, it’s no easy fix. And with the country getting bigger, older, and more obsee - and the pool of doctors getting smaller - it’s a crisis in the making.  

Segment 2: Physician Shortage, Part 2 [12:47-20:11]

Guest: Dr. Harold Sox, Professor emeritus of medicine at The Dartmouth Institute in Hanover, NH, and the former editor of The Annals of Internal Medicine.

The number of American medical students choosing primary care is half what it was in 1997 and as many as 50% of primary care providers have stopped taking new patients. If we’re facing a shortage of the doctors we see most what’s being done about it?

Segment 3: The Rural Surgeon [20:27-28:00] 

Guest: Dr. Henry Fleishmann, Surgeon

To get a sense of the pressures that are driving doctors-in-training out of primary care and general surgery and into higher-paying specialties and sub-specialties, look no further than the rural surgeon. And look while you can, because its showing signs of disappearing altogether. 300 US counties lost all their surgeons in the last five years and 900 counties have no surgeons whatsoever. 

Eden, NC, has a population of 15,000. It’s located in Rockingham County in central North Carolina, about 30 miles south of the Virginia border. Dr. Henry Fleishmann is one of two practicing surgeons in Eden. He’s lived and worked in the city for 31 years.

Timing and Cues

The Recovery Room 001 (Re-Broadcast)
Physician Shortage
Time: 29:00

Billboard (length 1:00): 00:00-1:00
Incue: From WDAV in Davidson, NC, this is The Recovery Room, making sense of modern medicine. I'm Dr. Rick Greene.
Outcue: ... coming up on The Recovery Room.

Local Break (length 1:00) 1:00-2:00

Program (length 28:00) 2:00-30:00
Incue: The Recovery Room is supported from a grant by the Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons.
Outcue: Find us on the web at recovery room show dot org.
Time: 29:00

Additional Credits

The Recovery Room is supported by a grant from the American College of Surgeons Foundation.

Related Website

http://recoveryroomshow.org/