Tuesday, March 22, 2022

HMM: Twenty percent of newly-minted MDs will ultimately not be able to practice medicine.

To be licensed, new doctors must complete a graduate medical training program (residency), of which there is a shortage of slots available.
Why should we care? The Association of American Medical Colleges estimates the United States has a shortage of nearly 20,000 physicians today. This shortage could possibly rise as high as 124,000 by the year 2034 as aging physicians retire. The U.S. has an aging population who will need care and many rural towns and urban areas are under-served by physicians. At the same time the U.S. has an excess of medical school graduates who would like to practice medicine but may never be allowed to.
There is something seriously wrong with the medical bureaucracy as anyone who's lived through the last two years of covidiocy can easily attest.

Just a random thought: Did Anthony Fauci ever complete a residency? Or was he a 20 percenter?

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