Dive Brief:
The share of family physicians working in rural areas decreased 11% from 2017 to 2023, according to a study published this month in the Annals of Family Medicine.
The Northeast saw the greatest loss in rural family physicians over the study period at 15.3%, while the West lost just 3.2% of rural family doctors.
The data adds to concerns about physician shortages nationwide. America is expected to need more doctors than ever by 2030 to care for aging Baby Boomers, yet physicians say they’re struggling to hire and retain qualified talent amid high levels of burnout.
Dive Insight:
The research team used data from the American Medical Association to map changes in the family physician population over time. Overall, there was a net loss of 1,303 rural family physicians acr

Healthcare Dive

America News
Raw Story
CBS Colorado Politics
NBC10 Philadelphia
The Babylon Bee
The Atlantic
CNN