Starting with the premise that the provision of healthcare services in the US is inefficient, and I don't think you'll find a lot of disagreement on that from MDs, a smaller physician work force is entirely doable.
Studies have found that clinics delivering care can do so with far fewer MDs than are typically found within them. For example, the Mayo Clinic in Minneapolis in one study did the same amount of work that the Cedar-Sinai in LA did with 50.
This BS call from some quarters in education for more docs is more about getting young people to fork out the $250k (or take on the debt) it takes, sometimes way more, to get that MD degree. Medical education is big business and one of the most lucrative revenue streams in any institution providing that kind of training.
Studies have found that clinics delivering care can do so with far fewer MDs than are typically found within them. For example, the Mayo Clinic in Minneapolis in one study did the same amount of work that the Cedar-Sinai in LA did with 50.
This BS call from some quarters in education for more docs is more about getting young people to fork out the $250k (or take on the debt) it takes, sometimes way more, to get that MD degree. Medical education is big business and one of the most lucrative revenue streams in any institution providing that kind of training.
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