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Welcome
Patricia Moulton, Ph.D.Principal Investigator,
Rural Health Research Gateway
www.ruralhealthresearch.org
Feature Presentation
Mark Doescher, MD, MSPH
Director, WWAMI Rural Health Research and
UW Center for Health Workforce StudiesUniversity of Washington School of
Medicine
6
Informing Rural Primary Care Workforce Policy: What Does the Evidence Tell Us?
Mark Doescher, MD, MSPHDirector, WWAMI Rural Health Research and
UW Center for Health Workforce StudiesUniversity of Washington School of Medicine
Rural Health Research Gateway WebinarSeptember 23, 2010
7
Goals and Objectives
1. Review the rural primary care supply literature 2. Discuss policies aimed at improving rural
primary care supply
8
Primary Care is Beneficial
GAO report Feb 2008:“Ample research concludes that the nation’s over
reliance on specialty care services at the expense of primary care leads to a health system that is less efficient.”
“Research shows that preventive care, care coordination for the chronically ill, and continuity of care—all hallmarks of primary care medicine—can achieve better health outcomes and cost savings.”
10
Primary Care Under Threat
Issues• Over the past 15 years, the number of U.S. health care
students choosing primary care careers has declined dramatically.
• Factors discouraging rural primary care careers:– Low compensation (in relative terms)– Rising malpractice premiums (in many states)– Limited time off (in many settings) – Lack of respect (in academic medical centers and
among peers)– Lack of student interest in rural careers– Difficulty finding jobs for spouses (in rural settings)– Professional isolation (in many settings)
11
Rural Primary Care Under Threat
• The rural primary care workforce needs professionals who are:• willing to work long hours• prepared to care for a broad range of
populations, especially seniors.• But new health care professionals work fewer
hours and have narrower expertise than their predecessors.
12
Physician Specialty Choice Over Time
Updated from: Institute of Medicine (IOM). 1994. Changing the Health Care System: Models from Here and Abroad.
87%
59%53%
45%38%
34% 33% 32% 31%
13%
41%47%
55%62%
66% 67% 68% 69%
1931 1949 1960 1965 1970 1981 1988 1995 2000
13
Urban LargeRural
SmallRural
IsolatedSmall Rural
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
8071
61 59
36
Primary Care Physicians Per 100,000 Population, 2005
14
Key Characteristics Affecting the Rural Primary Care Workforce, 2005
Doescher MP, et al. Policy brief: the aging of the primary care physician workforce: are rural locations vulnerable? Seattle, WA: WWAMI Rural Health Research Center, University of Washington; June, 2009.
15Bodenheimer T. N Engl J Med 2006;355:861-864.
Proportions of Third-Year Internal Medical Residents Choosing Careers as Generalists, Subspecialists, and
Hospitalists
17
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
Ruralprograms
Urbanprograms
Total
20002007
Chen FM, et al. Policy brief: the availability of family medicine residency training in rural locations of the United States. Seattle, WA: WWAMI Rural Health Research Center, University of Washington, June, 2009.
Decrease in Rural Family Medicine Training (FTEs)
18
Increasing Reliance on DOs and IMGs
• Rapid expansion of osteopathic medical schools: – 7% of US medical students in 1993– 18% of US medical students by 2015
• The majority of family medicine residency slots are filled by IMGs and DOs.
Physician Distribution, 2005
All Physicians
Primary Care
Physicians
DOs 5% 8%
IMGs 22% 25%
20
Increasing Reliance on APNs and PAs
• Licensed Advanced Practice Nurses (APNs) increased by 80% between 1999 and 2006– perhaps 140,000 APNs in 2006
• Clinically active Physician Assistants (PAs) nearly tripled in the last 15 years– roughly 64,000 PAs in 2006
• In Wyoming, APNs + PAs comprise 34% of the primary care workforce and 46% of the direct clinical care providers at rural CHCs.*
*Skillman SM, et al. Wyoming primary care gaps and policy options. Final Report #122. Seattle, WA: WWAMI Center for Health Workforce Studies, University of Washington; Dec 2008.
Copyright ©2010 by Project HOPE, all rights reserved.
Perri A. Morgan and Roderick S. Hooker, Choice Of Specialties Among Physician Assistants In The United States, Health Affairs, Vol 29, Issue 5, 887-892
Declining Percentage of PAs in Primary Care Practice, 1991–2005
22
Rural Primary Care Shortages:Primary Care HPSAs
• Over 35 million persons in the U.S. live in HPSAs
• Over three-quarters of rural counties are designated as primary care HPSAs.
• 165 rural counties lacked a primary care physician in 2005.
Sources: Kaiser Family Foundation, available at http://www.statehealthfacts.org/profileind.jsp?sub=156&rgn=27&cat=8Doescher MP et al. Policy brief: Persistent primary care health professional shortage areas (HPSAs) and health care
access in rural America. Seattle, WA: WWAMI Rural Health Research Center, University of Washington; Sep 2009.
23
Rural Primary Care Shortages: Vacancies at FQHCs
Evidence• In 2004, FQHCs had high proportions of unfilled
positions– roughly one third of rural FQHCs spent over 7
months recruiting a a primary care provider.
Rosenblatt RA, et al. Shortages of medical personnel at community health centers: implications for planned expansion. JAMA. Mar 1 2006;295(9):1042-1049.
24
US Primary Care Health Professional Shortage Areas By County (2006)
Legend
Data Source: HRSA (08/03/2006) Prepared by The Robert Graham Center
A Partial PC HPSA (n=667, 21.2%)A Full PC HPSA (n=1381, 44.0%)
Not A PC HPSA (n=1093, 34.8%)
>750 vacancies for PCPs at Community Health Centers (2004)
25
24 million more U.S. Seniors by 2025
2009 2025 Change (n) Change (%)
All Ages 306,272,395 349,439,199 43,166,804 14%
65 and above 39,481,666 63,523,732 24,042,066 61%
U.S. Census Bureau
26
Population Trends + Health Care Reform = Worsening Rural Shortages
• 30% or greater increase in primary care workload by 2025.
• 7% increase in primary care supply, at best.• Translates to a shortfall of 35,000 to 44,000 primary care
providers nationally who treat adults (if the “business as usual” approach to primary care continues).
Based on: Colwill JM, Cultice JM, Kruse RL. Will generalist physician supply meet demands of an increasing and aging population? Health Aff (Millwood). 2008 May-Jun;27(3):w232-41.
27
Policies Needed to Reinvigorate Primary Care
To be effective, policies must
address:– Training pipeline– Lifestyle– Compensation
31
Need to increase the number of rural students who apply to health professions schools.
Need to improve K-12 education, especially in science and math.
Need to support post-baccalaureate programs to help disadvantaged students succeed in health professions schools.
The Applicant Pool
32
States have an obligation to meet the health care needs of their populations.
Selective admissions processes can be used to meet those needs:
Location of upbringing
Plan to become primary care provider (earlier the better)
Size and type of undergraduate college
Objective, unbiased admissions process, including unbiased interviews
The Admissions Process
33
The Educational Experience
Curricula • Intensive long-term relevant integrated clinical curriculum• Multiple primary care courses and rotations• For physicians, residency programs that reinforce primary
care values and teach relevant skills for rural settings• Other Factors• Manageable student debt (<$150,000 for physicians)• Strong psychosocial support for students• Institutional values and commitment
34
Policies to Expand Rural Medical Education
• The “Affordable Care Act” (ACA) creates a special grant program for medical schools to “establish, improve, or expand rural focused education and training”, including: – helping recruit students most likely to practice in
underserved rural communities– providing rural training experiences– increasing the number of graduates who ultimately
practice in rural communities
35
Policy to Expand Rural Residency Training
• The ACA redistributes unused physician residency training slots to other institutions; priority given to primary care and general surgery, states with the lowest resident-to-population ratios, and rural areas (effective 2011).
• The ACA counts resident training time in all training sites as long as the hospital pays the resident stipends and benefits (effective 2010).
• Bottom line: helps ensure availability of residency programs in rural and underserved areas.
36
Creation of an Advanced Practice Nurse Training Program
• A Medicare demonstration project will pay hospitals to
cover costs of training APNs – an approach that builds on Medicare GME for physicians.
• However, it is limited to five hospitals across the nation. • Half of the training must occur in community-based
settings.
37
The Advent of Teaching Health Centers
• The ACA creates “Teaching Health Centers” under Title VII to train primary care medical and dental residents in FQHCs and a few other settings.
39
Lifestyle
A primary care physician with a panel of 2500 average patients would spend:
7.4 hours per day to deliver all recommended preventive care.
10.6 hours per day to deliver all recommended chronic care services.
Yarnall et al. Am J Public Health 2003;93:635.Ostbye et al. Annals of Fam Med 2005;3:209.
40
Practice Support Needed
Networks/Care Coordination• Clinic support: e.g., team care to deal with preventive
care, chronic illness care, etc.• After hours support: e.g., after hours call coverage,
shared practice arrangements, etc. • Adequate urgent care/emergency care support• Adequate specialist support
41
Expansion in Title VII Funding Aimed at Improving Practice Support
• ACA expands Title VII to include demonstration projects providing training to physicians and PAs focusing on new models of care, such as – medical homes – team management of chronic disease– integration of physical and mental health services
(effective 2010-2014).
42
Major Health Center Investment May Increase Practice Support
• Opportunities for community-based, team-oriented primary care practice in more than 8,000 sites across the nation will be created. – The ACA increases funding for federally-qualified health centers
(FQHCs) by $11 billion over 5 years with a goal of serving 20 million more patients
– Establishes new programs to support school-based health centers (effective fiscal year 2010)
– Establishes new nurse-managed health clinics (effective fiscal year 2010)
43
Policies Needed to Reinvigorate Rural Primary Care
$ $Compensation
$ $
$
$
$$
$
$
$
$$
$
$$$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
44
The Widening Physician Payment Gap
$0
$50,000
$100,000
$150,000
$200,000
$250,000
$300,000
$350,000
$400,000
$450,000
Year
An
nu
al In
com
e
Diagnostic Radiology
Orthopedic Surgery
Primary Care
Family Medicine
Source: Robert Graham Center
45
Major Boost in Loan Repayment
• ACA provides for a doubling of the National Health Service Corps field strength– $1.5 billion over five years, which will place an estimated 15,000
primary care providers in provider shortage communities.– Allow for part-time service and teaching to count for obligated
clinical service.
• Bottom Line: This expansion will benefit state recruitment programs that seek to bring primary care providers into rural communities.
46
Modest Increase in Fee for Service Payment for Primary Care Services
– The ACA provides for a 10% Medicare bonus payment to primary care physicians practicing in HPSAs. (Effective for five years beginning January 1, 2011).
– Increases Medicaid payments to 100% of the Medicare rates for primary care services provided by primary care doctors. (Effective 2013 and 2014.)
47
Pilots of Prospective Payment for Primary Care Services
• The ACA establishes the Community-based Collaborative Care Network Program to support consortiums to coordinate and integrate health care services, for low-income uninsured and underinsured populations.
• Allows insurance exchanges to include qualified primary care medical homes.
• Pilots: bundled payments and Accountable Care Organizations.
48
Questions?
Mark [email protected]
University of WashingtonWWAMI Rural Health Research Center http://depts.washington.edu/uwrhrc/index.php
Center for Health Workforce Studieshttp://depts.washington.edu/uwchws/
Overview Although state revenue challenges
continue, the steep drop appears to be subsiding.
Many states continue to face sizeable budget gaps.
To date, states have reported a total estimated budget gap of US$537.2 billion (FY 2008 through FY 2013).
Projected Return to Peak Revenue Collections
Source: NCSL survey of state legislative fiscal offices, July 2010
N/A: North Dakota Not in the current forecast horizon: 19 statesNo Response: 4 states
$49.1$78.4
$36.3 $26.9 $40.3
$145.9
$83.9 $72.1 $64.3$37.2
$29.9
$5.3
$0.7
$12.8
$77.0
$28.2
$12.3
$0$10$20$30$40$50$60$70$80$90
$100$110$120$130$140$150$160$170$180$190
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Bill
ions
of D
olla
rs
Fiscal Year
$79.0
$83.7
$37.0
$117.3
$174.1
$96.2
43 states 45 states 42 states 33 states 26 states 1 state 20 states* 44 states* 49 states* 45 states* 30 states** 19 states***
State Budget Gaps FY 2002-FY 2013 (projected)
No estimat
e
* Includes Puerto Rico ** 33 states forecast FY 2012 gaps. The amount shown for FY 2012 indicates the 30 states that provided gap amounts. *** 23 states forecast FY 2013 gaps. The amount shown for the FY 2012 indicates the 19 states that provided gap estimates.
Amount After Fiscal Year Began
Amount Before Budget Adoption
Projected Amount
Source: NCSL survey of state legislative fiscal offices, various years.
State Actions to Close Budget Gaps
Budget cuts: All programs & services subject to cuts
Tax increases Other revenue increases Federal stimulus funds Wide array of other actions, many one-
time in nature Renewed focus on streamlining and
efficiency
Key Concerns Looking Ahead Replacing federal stimulus funds - few states
have concrete plans to address the end of federal stimulus funding.
Feasibility of further budget cuts Length of time before revenues bounce back Feasibility of raising more revenues Unfunded pension liabilities New, ongoing and deeper structural budget
gaps (Many states face at least two more years of budget gaps)
Respondent
Tom Ricketts, PhD, MPH
Deputy Director, Policy AnalysisCecil G. Sheps Center for Health
Services ResearchUniversity of North Carolina
Discussion
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Thank You!
We thank you for your interest and support. All Rural Health Research Center products can be accessed for free via the Rural Health Research Gateway at www.ruralhealthresearch.org.
For more information related to health workforce, visit the Health Workforce Information Center at www.hwic.org.
WWAMI: http://depts.washington.edu/uwrhrc/NCSL: http://www.ncsl.orgSheps Center: http://www.shepscenter.unc.edu
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