Speaker Outlines Role of Family Medicine in Care of Children
By James Arvantes
• Washington, D.C.
4/5/2007
"Anyone who advocates for kids would be foolhardy not to think seriously about the real role family physicians play in serving the health care needs of children," said Scott Shipman, M.D., M.P.H., during a forum on the maldistribution of the child physician workforce sponsored by the AAFP's Robert Graham Center.
Scott Shipman, M.D., M.P.H., tells attendees at a Robert Graham Center forum that family physicians tend to follow the population in the United States.
There are an estimated 7.5 million children without access to pediatricians in their geographic service areas, and about 4.2 million children are more than a 30-minute drive from a pediatrician, prompting children and their parents to turn to "the more available family physician," for health care, said Shipman.
"That's why I am advocating that pediatricians and family physicians collaborate more," he said.
Growth in the Number of Pediatricians
Nevertheless, rural areas -- parts of the country with fewer than 25,000 residents -- have registered few or no increases in the number of pediatricians since 1981.
"The pediatric workforce expansion over the last 20 years has not effectively eliminated inequities in regional distribution," Shipman said.
Disturbing Trends
He said that family physician residents also are probably treating fewer children, and thus, many are entering the medical field with little or no experience in child care. He was quick to point out, however, that "this is conjecture on my part. I don't have evidence to support that."
Interestingly, the number of pediatric resident positions offered through the National Resident Matching Program increased by 10 percent during the past decade compared to a 10-percent decline in the number of family physician resident positions offered in just the past five years. If this trend continues, the number of pediatric residents eventually will exceed those in family medicine residency programs, said Shipman.
"The data suggest there are dramatic shifts taking place in the training of the next generation of physicians," he explained. "This means we are going to have an increasingly difficult time finding physicians for underserved populations unless pediatricians change their scope of practice and their place of practice."
Shipman cited some facts about the health care coverage of children. For example, in 2004 about 21 million children ages 0-21 went without health insurance for at least part of the year. Nearly half (9 million) did not have any insurance for the entire year. In 2005, more than 12 million children were uninsured for the entire year, according to Shipman.
"We are going in the wrong direction," he asserted. The federal government spends a total of $49 billion on programs for children each year, not a large amount when you consider that the Medicare prescription drug benefit cost $40 billion during its first year, said Shipman. In the past 10 years, the State Children's Health Insurance Program, or SCHIP, cost $40 billion, according to Shipman.
"Our policy makers have the political will to add this entire new $40 billion entitlement to Medicare, but there is a lot of hand wringing about the dollars spent on SCHIP, even though that same amount covers a much broader scope of care (than the prescription drug benefit)," he said.
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