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Home Research Research Library Rural Workforce Years: Quantifying the Rural Workforce Contribution of Family Medicine Residency Graduates Rural Workforce Years: Quantifying the Rural Workforce Contribution of Family Medicine Residency Graduates 2020 Author(s) Meyers, Peter, Wilkinson, Elizabeth, Petterson, Stephen M, Patterson, Davis G, Longenecker, Randall, Schmitz, David F, and Bazemore, Andrew W Topic(s) Education & Training Keyword(s) Rural, and Shortage Areas Volume Journal of Graduate Medical Education Source Journal of Graduate Medical Education Background: Rural regions of the United States continue to experience a disproportionate shortage of physicians compared to urban regions despite decades of state and federal investments in workforce initiatives. The graduate medical education system effectively controls the size of the physician workforce but lacks effective mechanisms to equitably distribute those physicians. Objective: We created a measurement tool called a “rural workforce year” to better understand the rural primary care workforce. It quantifies the rural workforce contributions of rurally trained family medicine residency program graduates and compares them to contributions of a geographically matched cohort of non-rurally trained graduates. Methods: We identified graduates in both cohorts and tracked their practice locations from 2008-2018. We compared the average number of rural workforce years in 3 cross sections: 5, 8, and 10 years in practice after residency graduation. Results: Rurally trained graduates practicing for contributed a higher number of rural workforce years in total and on average per graduate compared to a matched cohort of non-rural/rural training tack (RTT) graduates in the same practice intervals (P < .001 in all 3 comparison groups). In order to replace the rural workforce years produced by 1 graduate from the rural/RTT cohort, it would take 2.89 graduates from non-rural/RTT programs. Conclusions: These findings suggest that rural/RTT-trained physicians devote substantially more service to rural communities than a matched cohort of non-rural/RTT graduates and highlight the importance of rural/RTT programs as a major contributor to the rural primary care workforce in the United States. Read More ABFM Research Read all 2021 Re-Envisioning Family Medicine Residencies: The End in Mind Go to Re-Envisioning Family Medicine Residencies: The End in Mind 2019 Response to” The Importance of Support Staff to Research Capacity” Go to Response to” The Importance of Support Staff to Research Capacity” 2024 Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care Go to Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care 1995 Educational resource sharing and collaborative training in family practice and internal medicine. A statement from the American Boards of Internal Medicine and Family Practice Go to Educational resource sharing and collaborative training in family practice and internal medicine. A statement from the American Boards of Internal Medicine and Family Practice
Author(s) Meyers, Peter, Wilkinson, Elizabeth, Petterson, Stephen M, Patterson, Davis G, Longenecker, Randall, Schmitz, David F, and Bazemore, Andrew W Topic(s) Education & Training Keyword(s) Rural, and Shortage Areas Volume Journal of Graduate Medical Education Source Journal of Graduate Medical Education
ABFM Research Read all 2021 Re-Envisioning Family Medicine Residencies: The End in Mind Go to Re-Envisioning Family Medicine Residencies: The End in Mind 2019 Response to” The Importance of Support Staff to Research Capacity” Go to Response to” The Importance of Support Staff to Research Capacity” 2024 Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care Go to Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care 1995 Educational resource sharing and collaborative training in family practice and internal medicine. A statement from the American Boards of Internal Medicine and Family Practice Go to Educational resource sharing and collaborative training in family practice and internal medicine. A statement from the American Boards of Internal Medicine and Family Practice
2021 Re-Envisioning Family Medicine Residencies: The End in Mind Go to Re-Envisioning Family Medicine Residencies: The End in Mind
2019 Response to” The Importance of Support Staff to Research Capacity” Go to Response to” The Importance of Support Staff to Research Capacity”
2024 Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care Go to Family Medicine Residents Intentions to Provide Gender Affirming Care
1995 Educational resource sharing and collaborative training in family practice and internal medicine. A statement from the American Boards of Internal Medicine and Family Practice Go to Educational resource sharing and collaborative training in family practice and internal medicine. A statement from the American Boards of Internal Medicine and Family Practice