The United States will suffer a shortage of primary-care physicians as the workload will increase by 29 percent by 2025, according to a study published online April 29 in Health Affairs, a public-policy journal.
The authors of the study, Jack M. Colwill, James M. Cultice, and Robin L. Kruse, predict a 14 percent increased workload for care of children by pediatricians and family physicians, but the supply of generalists for adult care will increase 7 percent.
The study addresses medical healthcare availability, not chiropractic, but the authors say they expect deficits of 35,000 to 44,000 adult-care generalists, which threaten the nation’s foundation of primary-care for adults.
Monday, May 19, 2008
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