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Comment by nradov

6 hours ago

My statement above was correct. There are students who graduate from accredited medical schools with MD/DO degrees but don't get matched. Part of that is because some of them simply don't apply to programs that have extra openings. Medicare / Medicaid pay primary care physicians below market rates so students are naturally reluctant to pursue those specialties.

If they don't match, they're allowed to scramble and move into one of those programs with open positions. If they don't choose to, that's on them, but it's still not a problem with number of residency slots.

I very much agree that pay is a barrier to entering specialties like family medicine. Though it depends on the market, I normally see family medicine at around $200k/year and that's not great if one needs to take something like $750k debt to get there along with eight years of training after a bachelors. If we want to fix that, then we need to make the value proposition better and reduce the medical school debt, improve working conditions, and/or increase pay.

So, yes, if one wants to maximize their earning potential, then they need to enter one of the specialty residencies and fellowships. Those are currently filled. However, that's not where the biggest need is and I contend that's not why there's a physician shortage.