Findings Brief: November, 1997

international medical graduates in rural, underserved areas

Leonard D. Baer, MS
Thomas C. Ricketts, Ph.D., MPH
Thomas R. Konrad, Ph.D.
NC Rural Health Research and Policy Analysis Program
Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, UNC-Chapel Hill

the problem

The benefit of international medical graduates (IMGs) in compensating for local physician shortages may be offset by the financial burden of a national physician oversupply. Since 1988, the rate of growth in the number of international medical graduates in residency training and practice in the United States has exceeded the growth of domestic medical graduates. The number of IMG residents has increased more than twofold between the 1988-89 academic year and the 1995-96 academic year. Such a dramatic increase was made financially possible, at least in part, because the Medicare program has been financing a substantial portion of US graduate medical education. As the number of IMGs in residency programs and the US physician workforce has increased, many policymakers have become concerned that there are too many international medical graduates competing for residency positions, employment opportunities, and public funds with US medical graduates. Yet any reduction in the number of international medical graduates may affect access to health care in rural areas, particularly if IMGs are practicing in rural, underserved areas.

the study

To better understand whether IMGs are likely to practice in rural, underserved areas, this study calculated the percentage of primary care IMGs in the US primary care physician workforce in rural areas. The data were stratified by Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) designation as a measurement of underservice, resulting in separate IMG percentages for rural, whole county HPSAs, partial county HPSAs, and non-HPSAs. The study uses the 1996 American Medical Association Physician Masterfile and the U.S. Bureau of Health Professions 1997 Area Resource File.

key findings

International Medical Graduates as Percentage of Physicians in Nonmetropolitan Counties, US, 1996
Primary Care Specialists All Physicians
Whole County HPSAs
18.7%
25.5%
21.0%
Partial County HPSAs
15.2%
19.5%
17.5%
Non-HPSAs
14.3%
18.9%
16.8%
Sources: Area Resource File, 1997; AMA Physician Masterfile, 1996.

·International medical graduates do constitute a greater percentage of the US primary care physician workforce in rural, underserved areas than in rural areas that do not have a physician shortage. This finding is substantiated in most cases at the national, Census region, and state scales of analysis.

·There is also substantial interstate variation in the extent to which IMGs practice in rural, underserved areas. Some states, such as Mississippi, South Carolina, and Montana, have markedly higher percentages of IMGs in rural, underserved areas than in rural areas that do not have a physician shortage. Variation in geographical distribution vis-à-vis underservice is often much more apparent at the state scale of analysis than at the regional or national scales of analysis.

policy implications

The analysis of IMG location by state raises the issue of the importance of policy-making at that level. Policies that affect IMG distribution are varied and complex, and include state policies toward local recruitment, health workforce planning, policies toward federally requested exchange visitor visa waivers, administration of exchange visitor visa waivers, and regulations toward IMG licensure requirements. Given the complex interweaving of federal, state, and local policies, there is a strong need for greater collaboration, coordination, and consistency in policies toward IMGs.

Although state policies may be a key factor in IMG distribution, it would be an oversimplification to insist that the interstate variation in IMG distribution indicates that policy or legal issues are the single most important factors in IMG location, since the same geographical pattern can occur under other conditions. There may be many cultural and social factors affecting IMG location that are revealed at finer geographical scales, and which affect the state-by-state distribution of IMGs. Among the many possible reasons why IMGs help alleviate rural underservice more so in some states than in others include: state policies, state-federal interaction, social and cultural networks, public perceptions of the status of IMGs, hospital recruitment efforts and the location and activity of physician recruiters and lawyers seeking immigration pathways for clients. This study suggests that local and state conditions be given consideration in any policy that seeks to change the supply of IMGs in rural or other underserved areas.

View map: Percentage of Post-Resident Primary Care Physicians who are International Medical Graduates.