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- T F Jones, L Culpepper, and C Shea.
- Department of Family Medicine, Brown University School of Medicine, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
- Acad Med. 1995 Jun 1; 70 (6): 523-31.
BackgroundCurrently one federal program funds community health centers (CHCs) to provide services in underserved communities, and a second supports development of primary care teaching programs. Teaching CHCs respond to both program's goals, but their development is hindered by restrictive regulations of the two programs and lack of information regarding cost.MethodSpreadsheet software was used to develop a model that allocates cost components of a CHC-based residency. Productivity and staffing data from a teaching CHC program were used to estimate the cost of training and its sensitivity to selected variables. Data from 1992 through 1994 were collected from the family practice residency sponsored by the Brown University School of Medicine, the Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island, and the Blackstone Valley Community Health Center.ResultsAn educational supplement of $13.21 per visit would be required for the program to be cost-neutral relative to staff. The cost of outpatient training for a resident averaged $13,935 per year. Residents would "break even" if they saw patients at 19% above the average rate recommended by the residency review committee. If staff physicians instead of residents had provided the patient care, the CHC would have saved $6,171 per resident. Additional savings from improved physician recruiting and decreased turnover would increase the value of the program to the CHC. Cost was most sensitive to resident productivity, precepting arrangements, nursing staff support, and staff turnover.ConclusionDeveloping graduate medical education programs in CHCs can be a cost-effective way of increasing the pool of appropriately trained primary care physicians and increasing health care access for underserved populations. If teaching CHCs are to expand, provisions will need to be made for adequate reimbursement of their costs.
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