International Medical Graduates in the US Physician Workforce and Graduate Medical Education: Current and Historical Trends

Author:

Ahmed Awad A.1,Hwang Wei-Ting1,Thomas Charles R.1,Deville Curtiland1

Affiliation:

1. Awad A. Ahmed, MD, is a Resident Physician, University of Miami and Jackson Memorial Hospital; Wei-Ting Hwang, PhD, is Associate Professor, Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; Charles R. Thomas Jr, MD, is Professor and Chair, Department of Radiation Medicine, Knight Cancer Institute, Oregon Health & Science University; and Curtiland Deville Jr

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background  Data show that international medical graduates (IMGs), both US and foreign born, are more likely to enter primary care specialties and practice in underserved areas. Comprehensive assessments of representation trends for IMGs in the US physician workforce are limited. Objective  We reported current and historical representation trends for IMGs in the graduate medical education (GME) training pool and US practicing physician workforce. Methods  We compared representation for the total GME and active practicing physician pools with the 20 largest residency specialties. A 2-sided test was used for comparison, with P < .001 considered significant. To assess significant increases in IMG GME trainee representation for the total pool and each of the specialties from 1990–2015, the slope was estimated using simple linear regression. Results  IMGs showed significantly greater representation among active practicing physicians in 4 specialties: internal medicine (39%), neurology (31%), psychiatry (30%), and pediatrics (25%). IMGs in GME showed significantly greater representation in 5 specialties: pathology (39%), internal medicine (39%), neurology (36%), family medicine (32%), and psychiatry (31%; all P < .001). Over the past quarter century, IMG representation in GME has increased by 0.2% per year in the total GME pool, and 1.1% per year for family medicine, 0.5% for obstetrics and gynecology and general surgery, and 0.3% for internal medicine. Conclusions  IMGs make up nearly a quarter of the total GME pool and practicing physician workforce, with a disproportionate share, and larger increases over our study period in certain specialties.

Publisher

Journal of Graduate Medical Education

Subject

General Medicine

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