articleHealth AffairsMay 1, 2010Closed access

Primary Care: Current Problems And Proposed Solutions

University of California, San Francisco · Center for Studying Health System Change

PubMed
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Abstract

In 2005, approximately 400,000 people provided primary medical care in the United States. About 300,000 were physicians, and another 100,000 were nurse practitioners and physician assistants. Yet primary care faces a growing crisis, in part because increasing numbers of U.S. medical graduates are avoiding careers in adult primary care. Sixty-five million Americans live in what are officially deemed primary care shortage areas, and adults throughout the United States face difficulty obtaining prompt access to primary care. A variety of strategies are being tried to improve primary care access, even without a large increase in the primary care workforce.

Citation impact

646
total citations
FWCI
84.27
Percentile
100%
References
32
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Primary care
  • Workforce
  • Economic shortage
  • Medicine
  • Variety (cybernetics)
  • Nursing
  • Family medicine
  • Nurse practitioners
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