The New York
University Medical School recently stunned the nation by announcing tuition for
all current and future medical students will be free, irrespective of merit or
financial need. Dr. Robert Grossman,
dean at NYU, commented “this decision recognizes a moral imperative that must
be addressed, as institutions place an increasing debt burden on young people
who aspire to become physicians.” NYU says their scholarship – which begins in the
2018-19 school year -- is worth $55,000 annually.
Financing a
medical education has, indeed, become a moral quandary. Over the past three decades, medical school
tuition has quadrupled. The Association of American Medical Colleges
(AAMC) estimates the cost to attend a public medical school is more than
$240,000 and as much as $322,000 for four years at a private medical school –
an amount which is more or less equivalent to the cost of a family home.
Demanding
such a high degree of economic sacrifice brings with it a few complications.
Physicians raised in more affluent households can afford it — enrollment
statistics back up the higher rate of wealthier students — but they do not
necessarily become better doctors than medical students originating from middle
or lower-class families. And minority students, which are crucial to
establishing diverse representation in health care, more often view cost as an
insurmountable obstacle.
Burdensome
debt works against creation of a diverse physician workforce. Heavy financial liability stifles growth of an
atmosphere where all doctors are likely to provide culturally competent care
and make underrepresented minority groups more comfortable seeing a doctor, and
furthermore reduces the number of physicians available to work in underserved
rural areas, exacerbating a nationwide physician shortage.
Unfortunately,
high tuition is deterring medical students from entering the primary care
fields. Nearly half of third- and
fourth-year medical students say that their choice in medical specialty is
directly influenced by projected income — or by debt burden. In the U.S., only 3 in 10 students choose the
primary care specialties of internal medicine, family medicine, and pediatrics,
which generally have lower salaries than more lucrative disciplines like
cardiology, orthopedics, or anesthesiology. Ideally, 6 or 7 in 10 would choose
a primary care specialty, however surveys show orthopedists make $489,000 a
year, compared with family practice physicians and pediatricians, who earn less
than $200,000 annually.
As a member
of the University of Washington School of Medicine Admissions Committee for
more than 20 years, I have seen the number of applicants from underrepresented
minority groups decline significantly.
In my opinion, medical students should come from all walks of life, and
have diverse educational, cultural, racial and socioeconomic backgrounds — and
unfortunately, as the NYU experiment underscores, academic institutions are not
addressing the overwhelming expense of medical school education and the issues
that creates.
However,
free tuition isn’t necessary a silver bullet. To really solve the problem of
representation as well as improve quality of care, financial incentives should
be tied to outcomes. Fortunately, a model for that philosophy exists right here
in our region of the country.
The State of
Alaska has a physician shortage, but they are addressing it through cooperation
between northwest states and a program at the University of Washington School
of Medicine.
Through the
WWAMI (Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, and Idaho) program, tuition for
UW-Alaska students is partially subsidized by the State of Alaska via payments
to the University of Washington School of Medicine. Alaska views these subsidies as “loans” which
are repayable upon graduation. Repayment can take two paths: the loan can be
repaid in a standard plan with interest or can be forgiven by practicing
medicine in Alaska. Complete loan
forgiveness requires three years of working in a rural setting in Alaska or
five years in an urban location in Alaska.
Students who
are accepted to out-of-state private medical schools sometimes choose to go
elsewhere in order to avoid the Alaskan commitment. However, for those who find
the idea of medical school tuition far too onerous, this is a chance to fulfill
their dream without tying themselves to such overwhelming debt in the long
run.
As NYU’s
bold philanthropic move is reverberating throughout academic institutions
across the nation, I, for one, commend them on realizing the value young
medical students hold for the future of healthcare in this country and backing
that notion up with innovation and generosity.
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