top | item 45497564

(no title)

isubkhankulov | 4 months ago

The current doctor workforce is limited by a congressional cap on Medicare-funded educational slots. Apparently it was established in 1997 to prevent a surplus.

Of course, the opposite happened because of demographics and increased lifespans.

discuss

order

triceratops|4 months ago

> Apparently it was established in 1997 to prevent a surplus.

Perish the thought that we have slightly too many doctors. That can never be allowed!

I can't believe they passed that shit with a straight face.

I'll repeat what I've said before: no other profession in America requires a literal act of Congress to fund the training of new members. What's so special about doctors? Let anyone open a medical school if they meet standards. Give anyone an MD if they pass the exams and do the residencies, like lawyers.

And while they're at it let doctors go to medical school straight out of high school like they do in every other country in the world (other than Canada, I think). You'll give every new doctor an additional 2 years in their career they would've spent in undergrad doing a useless "pre-med" degree (assuming medical school becomes 6 years of study after high school instead of 4 years after an undergrad degree).

wombatpm|4 months ago

There already are 6 yr programs. A school in Ohio has a 6 yr program where you graduate with a BS and MD.

nradov|4 months ago

You're missing the point. Anyone already can open a medical school if they meet standards. In fact, several new medical schools have opened in recent years. But that doesn't do anything to address the primary bottleneck, which is lack of residency slots. If you graduate from medical school with an MD you still can't practice medicine until you complete a residency program.

Some schools do have accelerated combined BS/MD programs which can cut 1-2 years off the required total education.

dpkirchner|4 months ago

And as for what should voters do: they should choose people that are the most likely to improve the state of government.