Driven by an aging population and increased access to health
insurance, the U.S. will need more doctors by 2025, says a new study.
The expected rise in demand varies by state and medical
specialty, according to the study’s lead author.
“What’s happening at the state level can be very different
than what’s happening at the national level,” Timothy Dall told Reuters. He is
a managing director at the research and information service firm IHS in
Washington, D.C.
The new study, published in Health Affairs, looks at future
demands for primary and specialized health care providers. Those specialists
include cardiologists, neurologists and urologists.
The researchers used a computer model to estimate future
health care demand by taking into account a growing and aging population and
increased access to health insurance due to the Affordable Care Act – commonly
known as Obamacare.
The U.S. Census Bureau projects the country’s population
will increase by 9.5 percent between 2013 and 2025. The Congressional Budget
Office also estimates that an additional 28 million people will have health
insurance by 2023.
The researchers found the expected increase in doctor demand
was largely attributed to a growing number of diseases among an older
population. Obamacare, on the other hand, was linked only to an increase of a
few percentage points.
Overall, the researchers found the demand for primary care
or family doctors will grow by 14 percent by 2025. That’s less than the
expected growth among some medical specialties.
Dall and his colleagues estimate that demand for vascular
surgeons – who perform bypass surgeries and insert stents, for instance – will
increase by about 31 percent and demand for cardiologists will increase by 20
percent.
But those estimates vary by state.
For example, though the demand for cardiologists is
estimated to grow by 51 percent in Nevada, demand in West Virginia is only
estimated to grow by 5 percent.
Dall cautioned that the estimates are subject to change
based on health care delivery systems and behaviors.
For example, Dr. Reid Blackwelder, president of the American
Academy of Family Physicians, said conditions that would drive people to see
specialists are largely preventable with adequate primary care. Focusing on
prevention and primary care would be expected to shift demand toward family
doctors.
“As we start to recognize the foundational nature of true
primary care and prevention, we’re going to need more primary care providers to
be that foundation,” Blackwelder told Reuters.
Blackwelder, who was not involved with the new study, is
also affiliated with East Tennessee State University’s James H. Quillen College
of Medicine in Johnson City.
“The bottom line is that care delivery patterns will
change,” Dall said.
He told Reuters the new study can’t say whether the U.S.
will experience a shortage of doctors by 2025.
Previously, the Association of American Medical Colleges
estimated that the U.S. doctor shortage will grow to more than 130,000 by 2025.
“It’s important that we continue to update projections and
not wait a decade before we update them because things are continually
changing,” Dall said.
Source : Texilaconnect.com
Source : Texilaconnect.com
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