The Day

Med students shun ER jobs, which were once coveted

- By FENIT NIRAPPIL

“When students see us super burned out and dealing with a health care system that treats the emergency department like a release valve, they see the toll it takes on us. And in that environmen­t we don’t always have the emotional bandwidth to teach students as much as we should.” JESSICA ADKINS MURPHY PRESIDENT, EMERGENCY MEDICINE RESIDENTS ASSOCIATIO­N

Daryl Traylor dreamed of becoming an emergency room doctor ever since working as an ER technician in the mid1990s helping physicians care for children who broke their arms or nearly drowned.

But now he’s a first-year medical student, and those same doctors are urging Traylor not to follow in their footsteps.

They warn of burnout after COVID and patients’ increasing suspicion of doctors. The pay is not as good, they say, especially as hospitals rely more on nurse practition­ers and physician assistants to staff emergency department­s. And job prospects may be grim, they caution, as emergency medicine residency programs aggressive­ly expanded in recent years.

Traylor, 51, was stunned to learn that more than 550 emergency medicine positions were unfilled headed into Match Week, when graduating medical students are assigned to the hospitals that will train them. That was more than double the 219 unfilled positions at the same time last year.

Applicants to emergency medicine training programs have plunged 35 percent from a high of 3,734 in 2021 to 2,765 this year, according to National Resident Matching Program data.

Doctors and industry associatio­ns say the declining interest is a symptom of a medical field in trouble as the United States emerges from the worst of the pandemic. Emergency department­s are under strain as they become congested with patients waiting for beds, veteran providers quit and violence against the remaining staff grows. These factors are damaging the emergency room’s reputation as an ideal place to learn by caring for a steady stream of patients with a wide range of problems.

“When students see us super burned out and dealing with a health care system that treats the emergency department like a release valve, they see the toll it takes on us,” said Jessica Adkins Murphy, president of the Emergency Medicine Residents Associatio­n, who is in her final year of residency at the University of Kentucky Hospital at Lexington. “And in that environmen­t we don’t always have the emotional bandwidth to teach students as much as we should.”

But she said the learning experience­s are still valuable. Most open residency positions are eventually taken following a supplement­al process that pairs programs that could not fill every slot with students who did not originally receive offers. That process filled 501 of the open emergency residency spots this week.

But the growing number of vacancies in the first round signals an abrupt shift for a specialty once considered among the most coveted in medicine, allowing program leaders to be selective in seeking the best and the brightest. The medical drama “ER” was America’s most viewed TV show in the mid-’90s. Emergency physicians were hailed as early pandemic heroes, risking their lives caring for a deluge of COVID patients overwhelmi­ng hospitals.

Now students like Traylor — who were drawn to the unpredicta­bility and challenges of emergency medicine and the opportunit­y to care for society’s most vulnerable — are having second thoughts.

“Nothing really excites me as much as emergency medicine,” said Traylor, who studies at the University of the Incarnate Word School of Osteopathi­c Medicine in San Antonio. “But I have to keep an open mind because maybe I’ll find something that resonates more.”

Emergency department­s that used to have their pick of the best medical students now have to cast a wider net. Even well-known hospitals in major cities — Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, N.C., Einstein Medical Center in Philadelph­ia and Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas — had open emergency resident slots after the first round, according to a list circulated to students who did not match in the first round. The three hospitals said all of their positions were eventually filled.

The declining interest in emergency medicine does not mean the United States is facing an immediate shortage of doctors to staff ERs. Applicatio­ns for emergency residencie­s are back to pre-pandemic levels after peaking in 2021. But the number of emergency residency programs has also surged from 171 in 2015 to 287 this year, allowing them to offer more than 3,000 slots for the first time, according to matching program data.

In fact, one of the factors that seems to be dissuading medical students is a 2021 report predicting an oversupply of emergency physicians with 8,000 more than needed by 2030.

But industry groups worry an overcorrec­tion could leave emergency department­s understaff­ed if the next generation of doctors turn to other specialtie­s and if burnout continues.

“With the current state of health care right now, there are more and more people leaving medicine and that may have us revisit oversupply,” said Chris Kang, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians.

Charlie, a third-year medical student in New England who spoke on the condition that his last name not be published to protect his job prospects, said his time as an emergency medical technician in Colorado during the height of the pandemic made him reconsider his goal to work as an ER doctor.

Instead of receiving additional help, emergency physicians told Charlie they were forced to work with fewer resources as burned out nurses left for better paying travel jobs. The emergency department bears the brunt of America’s public health failures, from uninsured people admitted with preventabl­e conditions to people experienci­ng homelessne­ss who do not receive basic care, he said.

Charlie said he still considers emergency department work to be a “noble profession.” But as the end of his medical school career draws near, he said he is also considerin­g residencie­s in psychiatry, internal medicine and family medicine.

“It’s just frustratin­g to watch some of these brilliant minds get ground down by just the pressures of the system that they have very little influence and control over,” Charlie said. “I really need to think about whether this is something sustainabl­e that I can make a career out of.”

Emergency residency program directors have been urging each other to consider students graduating from osteopathi­c and internatio­nal medical schools if they have not in the past.

Thomas Cook, who leads the emergency room residency program for Prisma Health in Columbia, S.C., said he interviewe­d 30 more applicants than normal this year, as he expected more students to view emergency medicine as a backup option

Cook, who has analyzed and written about emergency residency trends, said the rise of hospitals launching ER programs even while applicatio­ns decline would result in programs considerin­g more students with middling grades. But students who graduate at the top of their class don’t necessaril­y make the best emergency room doctors, he said.

“This is a blue collar job. We are the cops of medicine,” Cook said, noting how the emergency room guarantees treatment for everyone, including the uninsured as well as people experienci­ng mental health and substance abuse crises. “We’ve always been that safety net, and I think the biggest skill you have to have is a strong work ethic and an enormous amount of compassion.”

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