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AMA Blocks Truman Plan to Give Scholarships to Medical Students; Plan Would Distribute Physicians

House Commerce Committee Hears Federal, Civilian Doctors Debate

One section of H.R. 5940, the new bill calling for federal aid to medical education, provides that scholarships be given by the government to qualified medical students. As in the case of outright financial aid to the medical schools, this proposal has raised a serious controversy between the government and the medical profession.

The American Medical Association, fearing federal control and eventual nationalization of the profession, has voiced a strong protest while the Federal Security Administration, alarmed at the already exorbitant tuition's in many medical schools and the prospect of a doctor shortage, has fostered the government plan.

The immediate question is whether or not there is a doctor shortage. The AMA terms the emergency in medical education "fictitious;" they point to the fact that the number of physicians has increased 14 percent over the years 1940 to 1948 while the general population has grown only 12 percent. With normal efficiency, the AMA feels, one doctor should be able to care for a population of 1200 (this presumes adequate health workers to help the doctor). The present ratio of doctors to total number of people is about 1 to 730 and, if the new bill is passed as such, that ratio would be better than 1 to 700 in 1960 (see graph).

Actually, the AMA's deductions are consistent with the report made in 1932 by the Commission on Medical Education headed by President Lowell. That study predicted that if the maximum number of medical students graduated per year the physician population ratio would be 1 to 740. Furthermore, the report expressed the opinion that even with an average number of students graduating yearly, the medical profession was becoming overpopulated.

Changes In the Bill

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The AMA's opposition has changed sections of the bill, too. The present form that "scholarships shall be awarded only in fields in which there are not enough qualified applicants to fill enrollments," nearly eliminates pre-medical students because there is at this time such an over-population of qualified premedical applicants.

As the FSA presented the administration's recommendations last Spring to the hearings on the omnibus health plan, the scholarships were to be apportioned to the States, according to their population, not less than two to any State. The object of the scholarship program, as the FSA saw it, was to "keep pace with the progress made in financing the costs of instruction and facilities."

Here again the doctors' organization is primarily afraid of H.R. 5940 as an overture to socialized medicine. They claim the bill would provide "a subsidy for the unqualified political appointees, nullifying efforts of admissions committees to maintain standards" and thereby causing the public to lose faith in the profession.

Within the profession itself, the AMA feels that a spirit of competition might develop between doctors that would hurt their practices. Worst of all, the group believes that the federal scholarships would extend one step further the encroachment of the government into the affairs of medical schools and lead eventually to their nationalization.

Qualification of Need

The Association of Medical Schools has taken a more liberal view of the problem. Some form of aid, it thought, was a good thing but it recommended that there be a qualification of need in each scholarship case and that there be no "indenture clause." (As the FSA originally presented the bill there was a suggestion that the holders of federal scholarships be obligated to serve for a period of time after their graduation in a government agency or in a shortage area designated by the government.)

The AAMC objected to such a plan because they thought some medical students signed up might be seriously maladjusted to work in rural areas. With the AMA, the medical schools did not press to increase enrollments but thought that government aid should be extended to students already in medical schools.

The discussion of the indenture clause brings up the further question of the distribution of physicians. Though the AMA's figures probably reflect the consideration that there is an adequate supply of doctors, they do not consider how well those doctors are spread. While the supply of physicians in a city like New York is generally 3 to 4 times as great than the national average, some rural areas have only one doctor for every 1500 or 2000 people.

When the administration offered the plan of limited indenture, it was thinking of supplying doctors to staff the hospitals provided for in the recently passed Hill-Burton Act--legislation setting-up rural health facilities.

Distribution Problems

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