Abstract

The United States is facing a severe shortage of physicians providing access at the front lines of care access. Specialties with provider shortages include general medicine, family medicine, and other fields providing longitudinal primary and comprehensive care.1,2 In fact, because nearly one-half of visits to subspecialists actually involve primary and general medical care services,3,4 the insufficient supply of front-line physicians to meet patient care demands may be even more extreme than current projections suggest. Despite this impending crisis, student and resident interest in these front-line longitudinal care fields has been stagnant at best in recent years and has declined drastically during the past 2 decades.5,6 For example, in 2012, only 6% of graduating medical students planned careers in family medicine.6 Additional data suggest only 2% of graduating medical students plan to practice general or primary care internal medicine,7 and only 1 in 5 internal medicine residents plans a career in general medicine after graduation.8

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