Is there a doctor shortage?

1. New docs go unmatched every year.
Some match the following year when they reapply. Some will find positions in research. But too often, they leave the field out of necessity.
Finding a way to get these doctors treating patients would help the perceived shortage.
2. Not every patient requires a physician.
3. Are patients accessing their health care the “right way”?
There are multiple routes of accessing medical care. From calling EMS services, to visiting an ER or urgent care, to an office visit with your primary or specialist provider.
It is important that patients and the public receive education to understand which route is appropriate. And when.
4. Two out of Three Ain’t Bad
I had a Doc with an Emergency Medicine Fellowship explain the economies of medicine too me. Since that time, I've witnessed these same dynamics play out in hospitals, clinics, and even individual practices.
There are three main metrics the public uses to decide how satisfied they are with their care.
Speed: How quickly was I able to see my care provider? How quickly was I treated?
Quality: Did I receive "good" care? Did the provider(s) seem competent and caring?
Cost: How much did I pay? How much did insurance or the govt pay? Did it effect my taxes or premiums?
This can be summed up with We want our medical care to be Cheap, Fast, and Good.
That is the ideal. The reality is any system can only give you two out iof those three. The designers of the system, with input from all stakeholders (including patients) have to decide which two of these the need to prioritize. And then do the best they can on the third.

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