PPACA and the Growing Shortage of Pediatric Subspecialists
Over the course of this year, a spate of articles and op eds have highlighted a growing shortage of pediatric subspecialists. Earlier his month, Amy Mansue, CEO of Children’s Specialized Hospital here in New Jersey, addressed the problem in a very interesting post on the National Association of Children’s Hospitals’ With All Our Might blog. Ms. Mansue describes a recent visit to Capitol Hill during which she discussed the implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, explaining to the staffers that:
[t]he differences between strategies to address the needs of the newly insured children versus strategies to address the needs of adults couldn’t be more different. Start with the basic fact that there is a critical shortage of specialists in pediatrics, where the biggest issue facing adults is how to access primary care. There can be a utilization of physician extenders in the short run until more primary care physicians are trained; there is no similar ‘quick fix’ in pediatrics.
Pediatric neurologists and developmental-behavioral pediatricians are in especially short supply. A survey of children’s hospitals conducted by the National Association of Children’s Hospitals and Related Institutions in December 2009 revealed average wait times of 9 weeks for an appointment with a pediatric neurologist and 13 weeks for an appointment with a developmental-behavioral pediatrician. An earlier study published in Pediatrics found that, in addition to enduring long waits, parents and children also travel long distances to see these specialists–on average 73 miles to see a subspecialist in neurodevelopmental disabilities and 44 miles to see a developmental pediatrician.
This is concerning for a host of reasons, including the importance of early, appropriate intervention to the future success of children with developmental delays. As I discussed previously here and here, the “right” medical diagnosis can be key to accessing needed services, as can a thorough written evaluation and a doctor willing to advocate on a child’s behalf. This is true whether a family is fighting for publicly-provided disability benefits or special education services or to get a private insurance plan to pay for medically necessary therapies.
What explains the subspecialist shortage? As Ms. Mansue puts it, “it is all about math. There is no incentive to go through an additional decade of training to get paid less than what a pediatric nurse practitioner is now demanding in my home state of New Jersey.” Congress has tried to change the equation. PPACA provides for loan forgiveness of up to $35,000 per year for up to three years for pediatric subspecialists who “work for a provider serving in a [Health Professional Shortage Area] or medically underserved area, or among a medically underserved population that has a shortage of the specified pediatric specialty and a sufficient pediatric population, as determined by [HHS], to support the specified pediatric specialty.” But funding for this measure has not yet been appropriated. The federal government has also attacked the problem through its Children’s Hospitals Graduate Medical Education Payment Program, which provides funding for specialty training for pediatricians. According to a recent New York Times op ed, however, this program’s funding is also uncertain, suggesting that an end to the shortage of pediatric subspecialists may not be in sight.




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