UK medical school says it will establish satellite in Bowling Green, expand Morehead program, add Ashland hospital to it
The university said in a news release, “The UK College of Medicine is at its capacity at the Lexington campus and although there is a deep applicant pool for medical students, the college can’t expand enrollment without the help of regional partners.”
UK has 521 medical students, 139 in its most recent class. The satellite programs, which will focus on the early part of medical education, will increase enrollment by about 30 percent. For several years, UK and Morehead have had a program in which 32 students have completed their “third and fourth years of medical training with rural-centered clinical experiences primarily at St. Claire,” the release noted. That will now expand to the Ashland hospital.
The new programs could start as early as 2018. details are still being worked out, the release said.
Laura Ungar of The Courier-Journal notes, “A 2013 study by Deloitte Consulting found the state needed 3,790 more
doctors, including 183 additional primary-care physicians, to meet
demand even before the Affordable Care Act. Kentucky currently has 9,936
active physicians, according to the Association of American Medical
Colleges, or AAMC. That works out to 225.1 active physicians per 100,000
people in 2014, ranking the state 36th in the nation.”
“These shortages reflect a national issue,” Ungar notes. “AAMC expects the nation
will face a shortage of 46,000 to 90,000 doctors by 2025 – even as the
U.S. population grows by 31 million and the number of Americans over 65
goes up 46 percent. Compounding matters, more than a quarter of active
physicians nationally are 60 or older and likely to retire soon. Seeing
these trends, the association in 2006 called for expanding the number
of medical school graduates by 30 percent. A January report in The
American Journal of the Medical Sciences said medical schools have so
far increased enrollment by 23 percent.”