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CBSNews /

AP/ March 29, 2010, 9:18 AM

Primary Care Doctor Shortage to Get Worse

Better beat the crowd and find a doctor.

Primary care physicians already are in short supply in parts of the country, and the landmark health overhaul that will bring them millions more newly insured patients in the next few years promises extra strain.

The new law goes beyond offering coverage to the uninsured, with steps to improve the quality of care for the average person and help keep us well instead of today's seek-care-after-you're-sick culture. To benefit, you'll need a regular health provider.

Yet recently published reports predict a shortfall of roughly 40,000 primary care doctors over the next decade, a field losing out to the better pay, better hours and higher profile of many other specialties. Provisions in the new law aim to start reversing that tide, from bonus payments for certain physicians to expanded community health centers that will pick up some of the slack.

A growing movement to change how primary care is practiced may do more to help with the influx. Instead of the traditional 10-minutes-with-the-doc-style office, a "medical home" would enhance access with a doctor-led team of nurses, physician assistants and disease educators working together; these teams could see more people while giving extra attention to those who need it most.

"A lot of things can be done in the team fashion where you don't need the patient to see the physician every three months," says Dr. Sam Jones of Fairfax Family Practice Centers, a large Virginia group of 10 primary care offices outside the nation's capital that is morphing into this medical home model.

"We think it's the right thing to do. We were going to do this regardless of what happens with health care reform," adds Jones. His office, in affiliation with Virginia Commonwealth University, also provides hands-on residency training to beginning doctors in this kind of care.

Only 30 percent of U.S. doctors practice primary care. The government says 65 million people live in areas designated as having a shortage of primary care physicians, places already in need of more than 16,600 additional providers to fill the gaps. Among other steps, the new law provides a 10 percent bonus from Medicare for primary care doctors serving in those areas.

Massachusetts offers a snapshot of how giving more people insurance naturally drives demand. The Massachusetts Medical Society last fall reported just over half of internists and 40 percent of family and general practitioners weren't accepting new patients, an increase in recent years as the state implemented nearly universal coverage.

Nationally, the big surge for primary care won't start until 2014, when the bulk of the 32 million uninsured starts coming online.

Sooner will come some catch-up demand, as group health plans and Medicare end co-payments for important preventive care measures such as colon cancer screenings or cholesterol checks. Even the insured increasingly put off such steps as the economy worsened, meaning doctors may see a blip in diagnoses as those people return, says Dr. Lori Heim, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians.

That's one of the first steps in the new law's emphasis on wellness care over sickness care, with policies that encourage trying programs like the "patient-centered medical home" that Jones' practice is putting in place in suburban Virginia.

It's not easy to switch from the reactive - "George, it's your first visit to check your diabetes in two years!" - to the proactive approach of getting George in on time.

First Jones' practice adopted an electronic medical record, to keep patients' information up to date and help them coordinate necessary specialist visits while decreasing redundancies.

Then came a patient registry so the team can start tracking who needs what testing or follow-up and make sure patients get it on time.

Rolling out next is a custom Web-based service named My Preventive Care that lets the practice's patients link to their electronic medical record, answer some lifestyle and risk questions, and receive an individually tailored list of wellness steps to consider.

Say Don's cholesterol test, scheduled after his yearly checkup, came back borderline high. That new lab result will show up, with discussion of diet, exercise and medication options to lower it in light of his other risk factors. He might try some on his own, or call up the doctor - who also gets an electronic copy - for a more in-depth discussion.

"It prevents things from falling through the cracks," says Dr. Alex Krist, a Fairfax Family Practice physician and VCU associate professor who designed and tested the computer program with a $1.2 million federal grant. In a small study of test-users, preventive services such as cancer screenings and cholesterol checks increased between 3 percent and 12 percent.

Pilot tests of medical homes, through the American Academy of Family Physicians and Medicare, are under way around the country. Initial results suggest they can improve quality, but it's not clear if they save money.

Primary care can't do it alone. Broader changes are needed to decrease the financial incentives that spur too much specialist-driven care, says Dr. David Goodman of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice.

"What we need is not just a medical home, but a medical neighborhood."
AP
3 Comments Add a Comment
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xp958 says:
Your kidding me right? "Broader changes are needed to decrease the financial incentives that spur too much specialist-driven care" Soo... thats like saying... to help sports fan be able to actually take their families to a sporting event and be able to afford it, lets slash sports players salaries.. But ya know what the problem with that is? IT ACTUALLY MAKES SENSE. Ignorant people want to take money from doctors.. who save lives. GP's are needed and the problem isn't just compensation.. the people who are driven to med schools aren't stupid. They want to do surgery and focus on cancer... heart... brain.. etc. But, its always the people that want free medical care or have no experience in health care that want CHANGE. When anyone who wants to have a say or change the world of medicine can get into a med school then they can talk. Which I am attending med school. I took out loans.. 300k. Plus my undergrad.. then I'll work a residency for 3 years at 50k a year. Your gonna tell me I need to go to GP? Instead of more GP's. Why not give a new role to RN's. Seeing as most GP's are doing rocket science and deal with whining people that want narcotics for a bruise.
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KeithDrippingSprings says:
Tell your congressman that you no longer want to support medical schools. They will then graduate more GP doctors and fewer specialist. Pay off the new Doctors student loans if they practice as a GP for ten years. There are lots of simple solutions, you probably have some too, but most solutions our Legislators come up with are complicated and ineffectual.

Specialist are the reason health care is so expensive now.
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1notrub11 replies:
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Your points are reasonable. However, according to some physicians I have discussed this issue with, the problem will come in not so much how many graduate as what - but rather with, how many make a med school start in the first place.
Now one could argue, yes, that will make more room for the folks that didnt make the med school cut earlier. Is that the way we want to do it? Even if one disagrees with how people are culled for attendance at med school, standards reduction is not what we want.