• J Emerg Med · Feb 2020

    Review

    The Emergency Medicine Workforce: Shortage Resolving, Future Surplus Expected.

    • Mark Reiter and Brady W Allen.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Tennessee-Murfreesboro, Murfreesboro, Tennessee; American Academy of Emergency Medicine, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Emergency Excellence, LLC, Brentwood, Tennessee.
    • J Emerg Med. 2020 Feb 1; 58 (2): 198-202.

    IntroductionThe emergency medicine (EM) workforce has been growing at a rapid rate, fueled by a large increase in the number of EM residency programs and growth in the number of Advanced Practice Providers (APPs).ObjectivesTo review current available data on patient volumes and characteristics, the overall physician workforce, the current emergency physician (EP) workforce, and to project emergency physician staffing needs into the future.MethodsData was obtained through review of the current medical literature, reports from certifying organizations and professional societies, Web searches for alternative sources, and published governmental data.ResultsWe conservatively estimate the demand for emergency clinicians to grow by ∼1.8% per year. The actual demand for EPs will likely be lower, considering the higher growth rates seen by APPs, likely offsetting the need for increasing numbers of EPs. We estimate the overall supply of board-certified or board-eligible EPs to increase by at least 4% in the near-term, which includes losses due to attrition. In light of this, we conservatively estimate the supply of board-certified or eligible EPs should exceed demand by at least 2.2% per year. In the intermediate term, it is possible that the supply of board-certified or eligible EPs could exceed demand by 3% or more per year. Using 2.2% growth, we estimate that the number of board-certified or board-eligible EPs should meet the anticipated demand for EPs as early as the start of 2021. Furthermore, extrapolating current trends, we anticipate the EP workforce could be 20-30% oversupplied by 2030.ConclusionsHistorically, there has been a significant shortage of EPs. We project that this shortage may resolve quickly, and there is the potential for a significant oversupply in the future.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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