New Allopathic Medical Schools Train Fewer Family Physicians Than Older Ones.

2019

Authors Beachler, Brian, Jabbarpour, Yalda, Kamerow, Douglas B, Wilkinson, Elizabeth, Levin, Zachary, Bazemore, Andrew W
Topics Education & Training
Volume 32(5):653-654
Source Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine

The first significant expansion of allopathic medical schools since the 1970s was anticipated to produce more physicians capable of addressing the nation’s current and projected primary care shortages. However, our analysis of the early outputs of new allopathic medical schools suggests that these students were nearly 40% less likely to specialize in family medicine than existing schools.