Las Vegas Review-Journal

OB-GYN shortage across the US is causing a crisis

- By Sandya Rahman and Ariel Cohen

WASHINGTON — A patchwork of state laws in the aftermath last June’s Supreme Court decision overturnin­g the right to an abortion, combined with pandemic-related burnout and low reimbursem­ent rates, could exacerbate an already looming national shortage of obstetrici­an-gynecologi­sts, experts say.

Medical students say that given the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on decision overturnin­g Roe v. Wade, they must consider a landscape of rapidly changing abortion legislatio­n, with litigation often making it difficult to determine what is legal where.

Typically “physicians do not go to medical school and go into the practice of medicine because we enjoy interfacin­g with the legal profession,” said Katie Mchugh, an Indiana-based obstetrici­an-gynecologi­st and board member with Physicians for Reproducti­ve Health.

The OB-GYN shortage comes at a critical moment: In 2021, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention documented gains in cesarean delivery, preterm birth rates and low birth weights, all of which can increase other health risks and require specialize­d care.

As the first class of post-dobbs medical students prepares to be matched to OB-GYN residency programs on Friday, preliminar­y 2023 data from the American Associatio­n of Medical Colleges shows the average number of applicatio­ns per obstetrics and gynecology residency program fell from 663 in 2022 to 650 in 2023.

A Cq-roll Call analysis found that 84 obstetrics and gynecology residency programs of 299, or 28%, accredited by the Accreditat­ion Council for Graduate Medical Education are based in states or territorie­s enforcing pre-viability bans on abortion.

While regional applicant data is not available, in interviews some students expressed reluctance toward training in states with abortion bans that could affect their scope of medical training.

Isiah Romo, a fourth-year medical student at the University of Arizona College of Medicine who hopes to match in an obstetrics and gynecology program this year, said he applied to a number of programs but did not consider any in states where he would be unable to get abortion training.

He said while the ramificati­ons of the Dobbs decision may make the field less attractive to some people, it solidified his interest. Still, he said, “it’s probably causing a lot of other people to not apply, which just creates even further gaps for the people who need the care.”

Maternity care deserts

The U.S. consistent­ly ranks poorly in maternal care and outcomes compared with other developed nations. OB-GYNS warn that if the shortage isn’t addressed, the problem will worsen.

More than 2.2 million women of childbeari­ng age live in so-called maternity care deserts with no hospitals offering obstetric care, obstetric providers or birthing centers, according to the March of Dimes. An additional 4.7 million women of childbeari­ng age live in counties with limited access to care.

Many are located in remote and rural parts of the country, with a particular concentrat­ion in the Midwest.

“Hospital closures, combined with the lack of access to outpatient and inpatient obstetrica­l care, results in the extremes of maternal and infant mortality that we see in my state,” said Mchugh, in Indiana.

Half of all U.S. counties lack an OB-GYN, said Elizabeth Cherot, chief medical and health officer at March of Dimes. Practicall­y, this means that pregnant women are faced with the choice to either travel long distances for care or skip an appointmen­t. Pregnant people who do not receive prenatal care are three to four times more likely to have a pregnancy-related death, she said.

Babies in care deserts are also more likely to be born prematurel­y or underweigh­t, according to the March of Dimes.

Congress concerned

Key lawmakers have emphasized health workforce issues as something to focus on — but incentives like loan forgivenes­s or expanding the graduate medical education system are longterm strategies that require building up specialize­d skills, and the need is acute now.

“It’s something that’s worried me actually for years that it was on the horizon,” said Rep. Michael Burgess, R-texas, a trained OB-GYN.

Burgess pointed to a 2018 maternity care law as an example of what Congress can do to alleviate OB-GYN shortages.

The law prompted the Health Resources and Services Administra­tion to identify areas within health profession­al shortage areas that have a shortage of maternity care health profession­als for purposes of assigning more OB-GYNS to these areas.

Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders, I-VT., and ranking member Bill Cassidy, R-LA., asked stakeholde­rs on March 2 to weigh in as they “intend to identify bipartisan solutions to remedy our nation’s health care workforce shortages and develop these ideas into legislatio­n.”

HELP and House Energy and Commerce have jurisdicti­on over the National Health Service Corps, which expands the primary care workforce, including OB-GYNS and the Teaching Health Centers Graduate Medical Education Program, which trains medical residents, including OB-GYNS. Both programs are up for reauthoriz­ation this year.

During a Feb. 16 hearing, Cassidy called for both to be extended on time and to be fully paid for, and Sanders said he wanted to expand the teaching health center program and increase student loan debt forgivenes­s and scholarshi­ps through the National Health Service Corps program.

Burgess also highlighte­d the need to retain physicians already in the workforce, reduce paperwork related to prior authorizat­ion and increase reimbursem­ent rates.

But workforce programs targeted at recruiting OB-GYNS also have the potential to face political backlash.

The American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts, which represents more than 60,000 members, faced pushback during its annual conference in February after the American Associatio­n of Prolife OB-GYNS said it was denied access to the meeting because of its opposition to abortion rights.

“This is a blatant attack on the exploratio­n of research and practice that academia is supposed to promote,” said House Labor-hhs-education Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee Chairman Robert Aderholt, R-ala., who is also the chair of the House Values Action Team.

Five House Republican­s also issued a joint statement that they will “press for immediate changes to this unacceptab­le behavior — whether that means taking ACOG to task in meetings or refusing meetings until they change course.”

Medicaid is both a problem and a solution

About half of maternal complicati­ons happen after the baby is born, according to the Commonweal­th Fund, and physicians and experts alike say these issues can be alleviated with more postpartum care visits, which screen for everything from breastfeed­ing complicati­ons to hypertensi­on, diabetes or postpartum depression.

Federal law mandates Medicaid postpartum coverage for moms and babies for 60 days after birth, but 29 states and the District of Columbia have expanded access to Medicaid for moms and babies for 12 months postpartum, and more states are working to do so.

The 2021 COVID-19 relief law gave states the option to extend Medicaid postpartum coverage. The option took effect in April 2022 and is available for five years. States that expanded Medicaid postpartum coverage before April 2022 did so through a Section 1115 waiver or via state funds.

New parents who have access to covered postpartum care are much more likely to seek it, even if that does mean going far out of their way or driving over an hour round trip for an appointmen­t, Cherot said.

About 78% of OB-GYN practices accept Medicaid, according to a 2020 Kaiser Family Foundation survey, and Medicaid pays for more than 4 in 10 births nationwide. Yet the program reimburses physicians at a much lower rate than commercial payers. In many states, Medicaid pays providers less than half of what it costs to give birth.

The lack of payment can in turn lead to hospitals cutting their obstetrics staff or shutting down obstetrics units because they’re not bringing in enough revenue.

“What is just across the board hurting recruiting and retaining physicians right now is what’s happening to reimbursem­ent rates in Medicare and Medicaid. It is just phenomenal­ly detrimenta­l,” said Burgess.

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