The primary care workforce is dwindling. Healthcare professionals in the United States are avoiding primary care for a multitude of reasons. Whether it be the excessive administrative burden, high rates of burnout, low reimbursement rates, or medical education emphasizing specialization, people are rapidly abandoning primary care. The lack of primary care clinicians creates large primary care deserts, especially in rural areas. Several state and federal programs attempt to offer incentives, to hopefully motivate people to pursue careers in primary care. However at this point, the discrepancy remains.
Titolo | Source | Date |
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Nurse Practitioners in the PCMH | Advance Healthcare Network | December 21, 2015 |
Fewer Americans Report a Personal Physician as Their Usual Source of Health Care | The Robert Graham Center | December 15, 2015 |
Survey: 1 in 3 Family Physicians Pursuing Value-based Payment | AAFP News | December 2, 2015 |
End Of Medicare Bonus Program Will Cut Pay To Primary Care Doctors | Kaiser Health News | November 24, 2015 |
New Caucus Forms to Champion Primary Care on Capitol Hill | AAFP News | October 7, 2015 |
How Can Efficiency of Primary Care Patient Encounters Be Improved? | AAFP News | September 15, 2015 |
Primary-care docs reaping the most from shared-savings ACOs | Modern Healthcare | August 29, 2015 |
Revamping Medical Assistant Roles May Boost Physician Productivity | AAFP News | August 19, 2015 |
One man's quality metric is another man's reason for retirement | Modern Healthcare | August 5, 2015 |
A More Cohesive Home: Integrating Primary And Palliative Care For Seriously Ill Patients | August 3, 2015 |