Anonymous wrote:my mom goes to one of the top cancer hospitals in the country. you know how many of her doctors are from the USA. ONE! the others are from poland, egypt, nigeria ...
Anonymous wrote:Because it's cheaper to farm in a bunch of Indian and Chinese med school graduates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a shortage because it's hard.
the bottleneck is residency spots. there are more graduates than there are residency spots. ever hear of someone going unmatched?
Most are matched though
Typically, around 5-7% of U.S. senior medical students (MD and DO) do not match into a residency program during the main National Resident Matching Program (NRMP). In 2024, 6% of U.S. MD seniors and 7% of U.S. DO seniors did not match, with similar trends observed in early 2025 data, as reported by the American Medical Association (AMA).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it's cheaper to farm in a bunch of Indian and Chinese med school graduates.
THIS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a shortage because it's hard.
the bottleneck is residency spots. there are more graduates than there are residency spots. ever hear of someone going unmatched?
What do these unmatched students do? This is after years of schooling, correct?
Some try to rematch the next year. Some go pursue another degree (PhD) while they wait it out and with a backup plan of doing research. I have followed a few here and there on Instagram who are very transparent about their stories but I suspect that there’s a lot of shame attached to not matching so we never hear about those stories and people quietly disappear into research jobs, maybe teaching, other degrees, etc.
They tend to go into govt positions and MAHA loves them. Uncertified and unqualified- perfect!
Actually I knew someone who never did his residency, so he had a private practice and was never board certified. His patients probably never knew.
Anonymous wrote:Because it's cheaper to farm in a bunch of Indian and Chinese med school graduates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a shortage because it's hard.
the bottleneck is residency spots. there are more graduates than there are residency spots. ever hear of someone going unmatched?
Most are matched though
Anonymous wrote:Foreign doctors will work and live anywhere in the US and there are countless places in the US that American trained physicians do not want to live in for residency, let alone as Attending physicians.
i.e. if you went through all the trouble of attending medical school and completing residency would you really choose to live and work at a hospital in an old factory town in West Virginia or Tennessee where the only stores for 50 miles are a Walmart and some truck stops? i think not. But if you're from India you'll take that job over residing in the slums of your own country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because the AMA has lobbied for years to keep the number of physicians low. How else do you think their salary floor is ~200k?
+1
Anonymous wrote:Because the AMA has lobbied for years to keep the number of physicians low. How else do you think their salary floor is ~200k?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a shortage because it's hard.
the bottleneck is residency spots. there are more graduates than there are residency spots. ever hear of someone going unmatched?
What do these unmatched students do? This is after years of schooling, correct?
Some try to rematch the next year. Some go pursue another degree (PhD) while they wait it out and with a backup plan of doing research. I have followed a few here and there on Instagram who are very transparent about their stories but I suspect that there’s a lot of shame attached to not matching so we never hear about those stories and people quietly disappear into research jobs, maybe teaching, other degrees, etc.