The U.S. Physician Workforce: Beyond the Numbers PHYSICIAN WORKFORCE - BEYOND THE NUMBERS 1. High quality health care requires adequate numbers of high quality physicians. 2. The demand for health care services nationally will continue to mirror the pace of economic growth. Richard A. Cooper, M.D. M.D. 3. Variation in the health care utilization among states will continue to reflect regional differences in economic status. Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics University of Pennsylvania 4. Variation of health care utilization among small areas (hospital regions, counties) will continue to reflect the additional burden burden of socioeconomic disparities. 5. The training capacity of medical schools and residency programs programs must be enlarged commensurate with the future demand that flows from these economic and demographic realities. National Health Forum Washington, DC February 13, 2006 Burden of Disease Aging Technology Economic and demographic trends predict a continued growth in the demand for physicians Approx 20202020-2025 400 Active Physicians per 100,000 . of Population GROWTH of ECONOMIC CAPACITY GROWTH of HEALTH CARE SPENDING DEMAND for PHYSICIANS Ì GDP ↑ 2.0% per capita per year 350 300 2000Æ 250 200 150 100 1929Æ $0 GDP ↑ 1.0% Ø Health spending ↑ ~1.5% Ø Health workforce ↑ ~1.2% Ø Physician workforce ↑ ~ 0.75% $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 $50,000 GDP per Capita (1996 dollars) But supply will not keep up with demand. Approx 20202020-2025 350 300 2000Æ Projected Supply 250 200 150 1929Æ $0 $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 $50,000 GDP per Capita (1996 dollars) Approx 20202020-2025 400 Ì Active Physicians per 100,000 . of Population Active Physicians per 100,000 . of Population 400 100 And the “Effective Supply” Supply” will even be less. Ì 350 300 2000Æ 250 200 150 100 Projected Supply Age Gender Lifestyle Duty hours Career paths Effective Supply 1929Æ $0 $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 $50,000 GDP per Capita (1996 dollars) 1 Variation in physician supply among states will continue to reflect differences in economic status. Physicians per 100,000 . of Population State Physician Supply and Per Capita Income 1970 400 350 300 250 200 1970 150 100 50 $10,000 Physicians per 100,000 of Population $20,000 $30,000 Data from Reinhardt, 1975 DC Excluded State Physician Supply and Per Capita Income 2004 400 Physicians per 100,000 . of Population Physicians per 100,000 . of Population State Physician Supply and Per Capita Income 1996 350 300 250 200 1996 150 100 400 350 300 250 200 50 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 $10,000 State Per Capita Income (1996 $) $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 State Per Capita Income (1996 $) DC Excluded DC Excluded Constant Relationship between State Physician Supply and Per Capita Income Spanning 35 years. 1970,1996 and 2004 400 Physicians per 100,000 . of Population 2004 150 100 50 $10,000 $40,000 State Per Capita Income (1996 $) 350 DARTMOUTH Æ More is Worse Å STATES 300 250 2004 200 1996 150 1970 2004 R2 = 0.6011 1996 2 R = 0.5273 1970 2 R = 0.5129 “States with more medical specialists have higher costs and lower quality of care.” care.” Baicker and Chandra, 2004 100 50 $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 State Per Capita Income (1996 $) DC Excluded 1970 data from Reinhardt, 1975 2 220 . 210 200 More Specialists ---------------Lower Quality 190 Physician variable = “residuals after controlling for total physician workforce.” workforce.” 180 1 5 9 13 17 21 25 29 33 38 State Quality Rank Higher Å QUALITY Æ Lower 42 46 50 Physicians per 100,000 of Population "Physicians" per 100,000 of Population State Quality vs “Physicians” Physicians” Baicker and Chandra (Dartmouth “Residuals” Residuals”) State Quality vs Physicians Cooper (Actual Data) 200 190 180 170 More Specialists ---------------Higher Quality Physician variable = Physicians 160 1 5 9 13 17 21 25 29 33 State Quality Rank Higher Å QUALITY Æ Lower 38 42 46 50 306 HOSPITAL REFERRAL REGIONS (HRRs (HRRs)) DARTMOUTH Æ More is Worse Å Milwaukee HRR SMALL AREAS Among Hospital Referral Regions (HRRs (HRRs)) with similar health status, those with the greater expenditures do not have ▪ Better outcomes ▪ Better access to care ▪ Greater satisfaction Fisher, et al, 2003 Demographics of HRRs % Metro Demographics of HRRs % Black + Latino Fisher, Ann Int Med, 2003 100 Fisher, Ann Int Med, 2003 87% Metro 80 17% Black + Latino 16 12 60 % 40 % 8 45% Metro 4 20 0 1 Low Cost 6% Black + Latino 0 2 3 Quintile 4 5 High Cost 1 Low Cost 2 3 Quintile 4 5 High Cost 3 Wisconsin HRRs Hospital days per 1,000 Ages 1818-64 WISCONSIN HOSPITAL REFERRAL REGIONS (HRRs (HRRs)) 600 Milwaukee HRR 500 Milwaukee HRR Madison HRR 400 Greenbay HRR 300 Appleton HRR Neenah HRR 200 Lacross HRR 100 Marshfield HRR Milwaukee HRR 0 day/1000_1864 Days per 1,000 Wisconsin HRRs Hospital days per 1,000 Ages 1818-64 MILWAUKEE HOSPITAL REFERRAL REGION 600 500 Poverty Corridor 42% of total population 92% of Black population 74% of Latino population 33% of income Milwaukee Corridor Milwaukee HRR Milwaukee HRR Milwaukee HRR 400 “Poverty Corridor” Wausau HRR Corridor” Èminus “Corridor” Milwaukee HRR - Corridor Madison HRR Greenbay HRR 300 Appleton HRR 200 Neenah HRR Lacross HRR 100 Marshfield HRR 0 day/1000_1864 Days per 1,000 DARTMOUTH Æ More is Worse Å FREQUENCY OF USE “SupplySupply-sensitive Services” Services” “The quantity of healthcare resources determines the frequency of use.” use.” “Variations are unwarranted because they cannot be explained by the type or severity of illness.” illness.” Wennberg, BMJ 2002 Wausau HRR FREQUENCY OF USE Hospital Admissions in Poorest vs. Wealthiest Zones of Milwaukee 8 7 6 Ratio of Poorest 5 4 to Wealthiest 3 Zones 2 1 0 Diabetes Ages 35-64 Asthma Ages 1-17 COPD CHF Ages 35-64 Ages 35-64 4 “Physician Inputs” Inputs” into EndEnd-ofof-Life Care at Academic Medical Centers DARTMOUTH Æ More is Worse Å Goodman, et al, 2005 FREQUENCY OF USE Academic Medical Centers 63 AMCs 15 AMCs Newark Chicago Houston (2) Philadelphia (3) New York (2) Los Angeles Detroit (2) Washington Boston Pittsburgh 12 “Our analyses (of endend-ofof-life care) found threethree-fold differences in physician FTE inputs for Medicare cohorts cared for at Academic Medical Centers. 8 Number of AMCs Given the apparent inefficiency of current physician practices, the supply pipeline is sufficient to meet future needs through 2020.” 2020.” 4 Goodman et al, 2005 NYU 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 CPT-WRVU Equivalent FTE Physicians per 1,000 “Physician Inputs” Inputs” into EndEnd-ofof-Life Care at Academic Medical Centers “CounterCounter-clinical Conclusion” Conclusion” Goodman, et al, 2005 63 AMCs More care should yield better outcomes, but… but… …patients who receive the most needed care have ▪ more measured burden of illness ▪ more unmeasured unmeasured burden of illness ▪ worse outcomes. 15 AMCs 12 In large urban centers Number of 8 AMCs ThreeThree-fold At the extreme: Intensive care units (ICUs) offer the most needed care but have the worst mortality. 4 NYU 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Kahn, et al. HSR Feb 2007 CPT-WRVU Equivalent FTE Physicians per 1,000 The SupplySupply-Demand dilemma Physicians per 100,000 of population . 400 350 WHAT’ WHAT’S POSSILE FOR THE FUTURE? 300 250 200 1980 200,000 too few physicians Demand Residencies capped at 1996 level 1990 Supply 2000 2010 2020 Year 5 Physicians per 100,000 of population . 400 400 +1,000/yr 20102010-2030 350 350 Demand +1,000/yr 20102010-2025 300 Supply No change 250 200 1980 …and the gap will continue for decades. None of us has ever experienced shortages such as these. these. Physicians per 100,000 of population . Increasing PGYPGY-1 residency positions by 10,000 (40%) over the next decade is essential, but even that will not close the gap… gap… 1990 2000 Year 2010 2020 AAMC projects 17% increase in medical school enrollment by 2012 = 2,500 additional physicians/year in 2020 Demand 300 Supply 250 No change 200 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 Year PHYSICIAN WORKFORCE -- BEYOND THE NUMBERS 1. The training capacity of medical schools and residency programs must be enlarged commensurate with future economic and demographic demands. 2. Because so much time has been lost, chronic shortages of physicians seem inevitable. Thank you 3. Inadequate domestic production will cause a further drain of physicians from other countries, principally developing countries. 4. An inadequate supply of physicians will lead to decreased access to care for the most needy and deficiencies in care overall. Economic Correlates and Units of Analysis ZIP Code Comparison “Individual” Individual” 200 150 100 > $23,000 50 < $23,000 Direct relationship H e a lth E m p lo y m e n t p e r 1 ,0 0 0 Inverse relationship 250 A d m is s io n s p e r C a p ita A g e s 1 8 -6 4 . Comparison of Nations “Society” Society” 0 40 30 US 20 10 0 $- $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 $50,000 Per Capita Income 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 GDP per Capita ($ppp) Small Area Analyses of Counties (3,141) and HRRs (306) are intermediate between ZIP Codes (~25,000) and States or Nations Nations 6 Economic growth will continue, and health care spending will continue to grow more rapidly than the economy overall. 30 % of G D P 350 Cutler 25 20 10 NOTE: NOTE: Under President Bush’ Bush’s proposed 2007 budget, annual growth of Medicare spending would “shrink” shrink” from 8.1%, as currently projected, to 7.7%. . 5 2000 If PGYPGY-1 positions had continued to increase after 1996 at 500 per year Demand 300 CMS 15 Physicians per 100,000 of population . 400 35 0 1975 Had residency programs continued to expand after 1996, the US would not now be facing severe shortages. 2025 2050 2075 Supply 250 200 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 Year But had the “110% Rule” Rule” been put into place in 1996, the current deficits would be even greater. Physicians per 100,000 of population . 400 350 Demand 300 Implementation of the 110% Rule in 1996 Supply 250 200 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 Year 7