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Hawaii funds physician training to combat doctor shortage

June 30, 2010 | Eric Wicklund, Contributing Editor

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HONOLULU – Hawaii’s governor has released $140,000 for a physician training program designed to help ease the state’s worsening doctor shortage.

Gov. Linda Lingle made the announcement Tuesday at the Hawaii Physician Workforce Summit, during which roughly 130 healthcare leaders learned that the state is already short at least 500 doctors across all specialties and will lose more than 130 each year as its aging physician workforce retires.

 

Lingle announced that $70,000 would be set aside for the Hawaii Island Family Health Center residency training program for fiscal year 2009-2010, and another $70,000 would be set aside for the fiscal year 2010-2011. The funding will be used for Hilo residency development expenses and clinical faculty recruitment.

“With the growing physician shortage we face in Hawaii, this is a crucially important step forward,” said Jerris Hedges, dean of the University of Hawaii John A. Burns School of Medicine, in remarks carried by the Honolulu Star.

“It’s incredibly good news,” added State Sen. Josh Green, an emergency physician and president of the Hawaii Independent Physicians Association.

Following Lingle’s announcement, the TriWest Healthcare Alliance announced that it would match it with $500,000 per year for five years for an interdisciplinary training program for medical residents, nurse practitioners and undergraduates. Hedges said state officials hope the TriWest matching model can be used for other medical residency programs in Hawaii, like one at Wahiawa General Hospital.

The Big Island residency training program requires newly graduated doctors or residents to spend three years in family practice under guidance of the medical school’s Department of Family Practice and Community Health. The program expects to graduate four family medicine specialists each year – with officials hoping they open their own practices on the Big Island after their training is completed.

Hedges pointed out that the program has lost $6 million in budget cuts during the last two years. He noted the school has no physician assistant program as well, but is working with two Oregon colleges to train six Hawaii students per year.

Eric Wicklund
Editor of mHIMSS.org
Follow Eric on Twitter @eriwick
Related Topics:
  • Hawaii
  • Honolulu
  • Jerris Hedges
  • Linda Lingle

Reader Comments (1)Login to Post a Comment

AMA says: The physician shortage in
July 07, 2010 | 4:34PM GMT

The physician shortage in Hawaii is one example of a growing problem across the U.S. As millions of Americans obtain health insurance for the first time and can now access ongoing health care, it’s critical that our nation ensures a strong and viable physician workforce. A shortage of 85,000 physicians in specialties as varied as primary care, cardiology, oncology and general surgery is predicted to hit America by 2020. Already at least 22 states and 16 medical specialty societies report an inadequate physician workforce. Even more physicians may be needed to care for the influx of newly insured Americans.

It's clear that there is more to be done to attract the best and brightest students to careers in medicine and to keep practicing physicians caring for patients. The current average medical student debt is $155,000, and students and residents need help identifying funding sources and managing financial issues. Congress must lift the cap on government-funded medical residency training slots so that all future medical students can finish their training and become full-fledged physicians. Medical liability reform and permanent repeal of the broken Medicare physician payment formula will help physicians stay in medical practice.

-American Medical Association

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