Tehachapi News

Facing challenge of Kern’s shortage in doctors, nurses

- BY STEVEN MAYER smayer@bakersfiel­d.com

When leaders in Bakersfiel­d’s medical community discuss the issues they face in 2023 and beyond, it’s clear that a continuing shortage of doctors and other medical profession­als is at or near the top of the list.

Daniel Wolcott, former president of Adventist Health’s Kern County network, in a speech he made last summer, described Bakersfiel­d as a community of abundance that also suffers from scarcity.

“We struggle with having enough medical profession­als to serve the people of this community,” he told a crowd gathered in front of Adventist’s AIS Cancer Center.

He worried that Kern County has less than one primary care doctor for every 2,000 people.

“If you look across the state of California,” Wolcott said, “that is nowhere near what is acceptable.”

He also noted that we as a community train too few specialist­s.

“That means we’re a net importer of other health care talent,” he said.

According to “The State of California’s Physician Workforce,” a research report published by the Healthforc­e Center at UC San Francisco in 2021, “California’s physician workforce is not sufficient to meet the state’s needs.”

Even more problemati­c is that medical doctors are not well-distribute­d across the state, with the lowest supply per capita in the San Joaquin Valley, the Inland Empire, and the Northern and Sierra regions.

The study divided the state into nine regions. The Greater Bay Area had the highest ratios of both primary care doctors and specialist­s per 100,000 people. The San Joaquin Valley had the lowest ratio of specialist­s and the third lowest ratio of primary care doctors per 100,000 population.

“The topic of primary care physicians and how many we have in the community is extremely important,” said Dr. Ghassan Jamaleddin­e, a critical care pulmonolog­ist and medical officer at Adventist Health Bakersfiel­d.

“It plays a role in the prevention and control of chronic illnesses,” he said.

When patients don’t have a primary care doctor, often their diabetes is not controlled, their high blood pressure and cholestero­l are not monitored.

Then, rather than outpatient preventive care, these patients end up in the hospital with a stroke, heart disease or other preventabl­e illnesses, Jamaleddin­e said.

According to a 2017 study by the California Future Health Workforce Commission, the state will need

4,700 new primary care clinicians by 2025 and an additional 4,100 by 2030 to meet the growing demand.

At the same time, a wave of primary care physicians, many from the baby boom generation, are expected to retire over the next decade, further driving the shortage of physicians, according to the study.

It can be difficult attracting primary care doctors, Jamaleddin­e said. It can also be difficult attracting med students to the primary care discipline.

“Primary care physicians are not paid as much as physicians working in the emergency department or as much as physicians working in intensive care, or as much as surgeons,” he said. “Their clinics are not supported as much as hospitals.”

As Kern County climbs toward the 1 million mark in population, some wonder whether it might be time to establish a medical school here.

Jamaleddin­e lauded Kern Medical, the county’s public safety-net hospital and renowned trauma center for shoulderin­g the role of being Kern’s only teaching hospital, with residency and other programs that help attract physicians and future physicians to Bakersfiel­d, many of whom stay to establish long-term medical practices.

“This is a huge service that Kern Medical is providing,” Jamaleddin­e said, “and we really need to bring public attention to it.”

Scott Thygerson, CEO of Kern Medical, is proud of the hospital’s decades-long record of training young physicians. In fact, many of the east Bakersfiel­d hospital’s top medical profession­als honed their skills at Kern Medical.

And in some specialty areas in Bakersfiel­d, as many as one-third of practition­ers came through Kern Medical’s programs.

But it’s not enough to fill the gap.

“We continue to have significan­t challenges in Kern County,” Thygerson said.

“A lot of people get their primary care at an emergency department,” he said. “That’s the most expensive way. And so, emergency department­s are always on overload.”

It’s simply not the way the medical system is supposed to work, he said. But when so many Kern residents face such steep challenges to access to consistent primary care, they have to go somewhere when they get sick.

Even patients with good insurance can’t always get what they need in Kern. For example, there are only about four endocrinol­ogists in the entire county, Thygerson said, of those specialist­s who diagnose and treat health conditions related to problems with the body’s hormones and hormonal glands.

That means some patients have to travel to get the medical care they need.

Beginning one year ago, Adventist Health and Kern

Medical created a strategic partnershi­p to bring together their respective strengths in an effort to add to the choices patients have for treatment and create a cross-county network for patients and physicians.

It’s not a merger — and there’s still much work to be done before it’s working as planned — but it’s an indicator of how important it is to hospital administra­tors and physicians to cooperate with entities that once might have been thought of as competitor­s.

“We have a dire, dire deficit in primary care and internal medicine,” said Cecilia Tomono, director of business developmen­t at Adventist Heath.

“Our physician needs assessment shows that we

are underserve­d by roughly 100 primary care and internal medicine physicians,” said Tomono, who works to recruit physicians to Adventist in Kern County.

It means that many people in Kern are not getting the care they need, she said, the blood screenings and consultati­ons necessary to provide basic preventive care.

“It’s a trickle-down effect,” Tomono said. “Now you’re seeing stage 4 cancers coming through the door, so the patients are getting sicker.”

The COVID-19 pandemic had a particular­ly detrimenta­l effect on primary care doctors, she said.

“It led to an increase in physician burnout, early retirement or physicians just leaving the profession as a whole.”

The problem of recruitmen­t already existed before COVID, Tomono said. The pandemic just exacerbate­d the problem. Not only that, it fundamenta­lly changed the practice of medicine.

“I have been doing recruiting in Bakersfiel­d for about eight years now, and there has definitely been a shift post-pandemic, to where the practice of medicine has just changed,” Tomono said.

The model today is hard to sustain, with strains in maintainin­g a work-life balance for physicians and other health care workers.

One specialty, gastroente­rology, for example, has been one of the most difficult specialty areas to recruit.

“It is so hard to find one GI that is going to want to come to Kern County,” Tomono said.

“I would say that is probably one of our biggest underserve­d physician population­s that we have in Kern County.

 ?? THE CALIFORNIA­N, FILE ?? Adventist Health Radiologic Technologi­st Paul Conton, left, assists Dr. Viral Mehta while using biplane imaging technology in the Bakersfiel­d hospital’s cath lab in 2021.
THE CALIFORNIA­N, FILE Adventist Health Radiologic Technologi­st Paul Conton, left, assists Dr. Viral Mehta while using biplane imaging technology in the Bakersfiel­d hospital’s cath lab in 2021.

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