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This study evaluates the impact of outsourcing medical education from Nevada, analyzing the geographic, healthcare, and funding bases for establishing a new medical school in the state. The research highlights the shortage of medical professionals and training opportunities in Nevada, emphasizing the need for investment and reform in medical education. The analysis showcases the potential benefits and challenges associated with importing or exporting medical professionals, focusing on strategies to address the healthcare needs of the state.
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Outsourcing Medical Education from Nevada: Costs and Consequences John Hudak, Ph.D. Fellow, Center for Effective Public Management The Brookings Institution 29 September 2014 jhudak@brookings.edu @JohnJHudak
Requirements Outsourcing • A product of value • A geographic transfer • Location of origination • Destination • A cost to location of origination/benefit for destination
Outsourcing & Medical Education • Every state has healthcare needs • Every state has medical training opportunities • Every state has addition training capacity • Supply & demand of medical professionals • Surplus of medical professionals • Shortage of medical professions • Results: importing or exporting of medical professionals
Outline Part I. A Geographic Basis for a New Medical School Part II. A Healthcare Basis for a New Medical School Part III. A Funding Basis for a New Medical School Part IV. Conclusions
A Healthcare Basis for a New Medical School A shortage of medical professionals in Nevada • Family Practice Doctors 47th out of 51 (states + DC) • Pediatricians 46th out of 51 • Orthopedic Surgeons 51st out of 51 • Ophthalmologists 48th out of 51 • Psychiatrists 50th out of 51 • OB/GYNs 40th out of 51 • RNs 50th out of 51 **Research conducted by University of Nevada School of Medicine, rankings based on measure of medical professionals per 100,000 residents.
A Healthcare Basis for a New Medical School A Shortage of Medical Training in Nevada • Fewest MD students per 100,000 residents* (Nevada: 9.5 / 100,000; National Average: 25.8 / 100,000) • Medical residents/fellows per 100,000 residents, Nevada is 46th. (Nevada: 8.1 / 100,000; National Average: 25.4 / 100,000) • Medical residents/fellows per 100,000 residents in primary care roles, Nevada is 47th. (Nevada 5 / 100,000; National Average: 12.2 / 100,000) *Ranking based on states with existing allopathic medical schools Note: All data drawn from 2013 State Physician Workforce Data Book from the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC)
A Healthcare Basis for a New Medical School An Opportunity for Nevada Medical Training Silver State Loyalty in Medical Training • 69.2% of Nevada residents in MD programs matriculate in state • Among people who attend medical school & perform residency in NV, 79% stay to practice in state. • 5th Nationally • National mean: 66.6%
A Funding Basis for a New Medical School • GME Funding to the States • Medicare & Medicaid Programs • Assistance for Residencies and Fellowships • Largest Funding Source in US • Funding Levels Set by Congress • Bipartisan Reform Bills • Tuition Dollars (Federal Subsidy) • Program Plans (Private Sources) • Philanthropy (Private Sources)
A Funding Basis for a New Medical School Results of multivariate analysis of GME funding among all states Among all states, every additional medical school graduate = +$527,000 in additional GME funds Among all states, adding a medical school = $41.4 million in additional GME funds Among all states, data suggests** the addition of a public OR private medical school is associated with a substantial increase in GME funds **those results do not achieve statistical significance
A Funding Basis for a New Medical School Results of multivariate analysis of GME funding among states with 3 or fewer medical schools Every additional medical school graduate is associated with an increase in additional GME funding, though results do not achieve statistical significance Every additional medical school = $26.1 million in additional GME funding Every additional public medical school = $19.8 million in additional GME funding Every additional private medical school is associated with an increase in additional GME funding, though results do not achieve statistical significance
A Funding Basis for a New Medical School Since 2010, NIH funds to new medical schools, excluding Cleveland Clinic/Lerner School exceeds $57 million In 2013: FAU (2010): $2.25 million FIU (2006): $3.01 million FSU (2000): $2.17 million CMU (2013): $337,431 UCR (2008): $4.40 million UCF (2006): $5.65 million Cleveland Clinic/Lerner School (2002): $82.19 million
A Funding Basis for a New Medical School Additional Types of Funding – HRSA
CONCLUSIONS • Las Vegas among the most isolated cities in the US for medical training • Population, healthcare needs, geography, funding levels all suggest a need for an allopathic medical school • Training doctors in Las Vegas may limit medical brain drain
CONCLUSIONS • ACA will increase healthcare demand in Southern NV, an area already facing shortages • A new medical school can create tremendous federal, private market, and private charity opportunities for Las Vegas region • A new medical school likely increases research-related private market activity and FTEs
CONCLUSIONS • Federal healthcare funding to Nevada is among the worst in the nation, fitting a trend in federal funding to the state • Expanded medical training will increase opportunities for research funding • Reform proposals for Medicare GME funding will help states like Nevada (growing population, political clout)