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Rural Maryland likely to face severe physician shortage by 2015,
Report finds
[Jul 29,
2008]
Rural areas in Maryland likely will
experience severe shortages of physicians by
2015 as physicians begin to retire and
younger physicians decide to practice
elsewhere, according to a report by the
Maryland Hospital Association and
MedChi, the state's medical society, the
AP/Baltimore
Sun
reports.
According
to the report, the shortage would have the
greatest effect on crowded emergency
departments that depend on medical
specialists who work on call.
Southern Maryland would face "critical
shortages" in about 83% of 30 physician
categories, followed by Western Maryland
with 67% and the Eastern Shore with 60%, the
report found.
The report included a number of legislative
recommendations to address the situation,
including increasing physician payments from
insurers, overhauling the state's medical
malpractice system and creating a
loan-forgiveness program to attract younger
physicians to the state's rural areas.
Robert Barish, vice dean for clinical
affairs at the
University of Maryland School of Medicine
and chair of the report's steering
committee, said, "It's very worrisome that
only about 25% of our physicians are saying
they want to stay here," adding, "In part,
the No. 1 factor among residents right now
is they want to be close to home."
The report does not include cost estimates
of any of the recommendations.
The report is being reviewed by two
government panels that are working to
develop recommendations to address the
problem, the
AP/Sun reports (AP/Baltimore
Sun, 7/28).
An
executive summary of the report is available
online (.pdf).
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