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Association of Departments of Family Medicine
Dear Mr. President,
Congratulations on your election. We, the nations departments of family medicine, look forward to giving you a hand with health care reform. Compared to other rich nations, we know that our health outcomes fall far short, our health care costs are very high, and access to care is altogether inequitable. Rectifying these problems seems a daunting task, but when attention is paid to the abundant evidence, the solution boils down to 2 simple essentials—universal access to healthcare for all Americans, and much more emphasis on primary care, preventive medicine, and public health.
You may ask: "How will we pay for greater access and for more primary care?" Solid evidence shows that the initial cost for this type of reform is recouped within 2 years and then there are substantial savings. Just ask Senator Richard Burr of North Carolina. He can tell you about his states great Community Care of North Carolina program.1
Like oil companies, we in academic family medicine are concerned about pipelines. For the best health care system, we need to train more family physicians. Ask Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. His state introduced a program of universal health care coverage in 2006, but it failed to flourish because there were not enough primary care physicians to care for all of the people suddenly insured.2 And guess what? Its going to get worse. Currently, 32% of US physicians practice primary care. Over the last 3 years, the number of medical school graduates who will practice primary care is only 16%, and federal programs that will reverse the trend have been eviscerated.
Heres an example: Since 2000, the funding for Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) has nearly doubled to almost $2 billion. This is laudable. However, over the same time period, the funding for the programs that train the physicians most likely to practice in FQHCs (Title VII, Section 747) has been cut by 55%. This is appalling. Ask Senator Evan Bayh of Indiana if the new Lucas Oil Stadium would have been built if Indianapolis didnt have a pipeline of loyal Colt fans or the promise of a pipeline of conventions. The pipeline of family physicians is running dry.
Would you like some good reading? We recommend an article by Barbara Starfield, pediatrician and one of the nations foremost clinical epidemiologists. Her comprehensive review of the literature on systems of effective health care is in The Milbank Quarterly.3 Heres what our country needs:
Heres what is really amazing: These things naturally occur when there is an adequate workforce of family physicians. If you want an illustration, ask Leiyu Shi of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. His studies consistently find that poor health care outcomes due to gaps in socioeconomic status are eliminated by high concentrations of primary care physicians.5
Well, thats about it. In the long run, these changes will pay for themselves many times over. And the measurements wont be nearly as cumbersome as you might think. It will take some guts to take on the special interests that will be resistant to such change, but family medicine is ready to step up to the plate.
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