Interesting to read a bit about the GI situation in the 1990s (final linked
citation at bottom of the article):
"The demise of the match seems to have been set in motion in 1993-1994, when Gastroenterology subjected itself to a manpower analysis (Meyer et al 1996). Its main conclusions were that the US health care system and gastroenterologists would benefit from a reduction in gastroenterology fellowship programs. The Gastroenterology Leadership Council
endorsed a goal of 25% to 50% reduction in the number of GI fellows over 5 years. Furthermore, an additional year of training was mandated: starting in the summer of 1996, three years of training were required to be board eligible, instead of two."
I would really like to know the legal challenges the GI Leadership Council faced after that recommendation. Which brings up my personal top questions to be addressed at the April 1st Existential Crisis Zoom:
1) What are the legal barriers to contracting Radiation Oncology residency positions?
2) Same as question #1, but this time, has anyone consulted a real attorney with relevant case experience?
3) If it turns out these roadblocks are as flimsy as they seem, what needs to be done so that the decrease in offered positions can commence for the 2022 Match?
My sense is that the tide is turning as leadership at least is starting to acknowledge there is an oversupply problem, but the preferred tactic is to say "Oh we get it, but even if we wanted to, just can't do it. You know, anti-trust and stuff."
If that leg of the defense can be taken out, I think we'd get a lot closer to action.
Hell, how does Dermatology do it? Anybody know the inner workings of how a new derm program gets approved or resident spots get added? Is the bar incredibly high? My uneducated guess is they are conscientious about the long term health of their field, but if they were forced to grow by 33% tomorrow the newly minted derms would have no problems finding jobs. Maybe wait times would go from 6 weeks to 4 weeks.