National trends in pediatric resident recruitment
J. P. Piatt and P. S. Bergeson
Department of General Pediatrics, Phoenix Children's Hospital, AZ 85006.
Primary care residency programs throughout the nation are having increasing
difficulty recruiting sufficient residents. Only 65% of pediatric residency
positions are filled with medical graduates from the United States. We sent
a questionnaire to pediatric residency program directors throughout the
country to assess what changes pediatric programs had implemented in
response to matching concerns. Forty-one percent had recruited non-house
officer professionals to perform resident-type work. Such professionals
included osteopathic and/or foreign-trained physicians (55%) and
moonlighters (49%). House staff work hours had been reduced in 35% of
programs and on-call frequency in 33%. Sixty-one percent had made
significant changes in their recruiting practices in the past 5 years that
are described herein. Annual recruiting budgets varied from nothing to over
$75,000. This survey reveals widespread reduction in resident work load and
increased intensity in the recruiting process throughout the country.