Foreign doctors want to help fight the coronavirus. But the US health system stands in their way.

Foreign doctors want to help fight the coronavirus. But the US health system stands in their way.

Hospital staff react as first responders and New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio join in a thank you to hospital staff for their work during the Covid-19 pandemic at Coney Island Hospital in Brooklyn, New York, on April 16. | Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

Medical licensing requirements have made it difficult for foreign doctors to go where they’re needed.

As the coronavirus pandemic continues to rip through the US, hard-hit areas have been facing doctor shortages, placing both patients and overworked health care workers at greater risk.

Thousands of foreign doctors who already have clinical experience and are waiting for a chance to practice medicine in the US could step in to help. But even before the current crisis, the immigration system, coupled with medical licensing requirements, have made it difficult for them to work in the US and go where they’re needed.

Graduates of foreign medical schools face the same certification requirements as any American graduate — they have to pass their medical licensing exams and obtain a highly sought-after spot in a three- to seven-year residency program.

Many foreign students, though, have already completed years of training in their home countries before they seek US certification. That experience has little bearing on their admission into residency programs, where available spots are always fewer than the number of applicants, and graduates of US medical schools are given preference.

In 2020, about 40 percent of foreign medical school graduates didn’t “match” with a residency program, compared to only 6 percent of American graduates. That means thousands of qualified doctors being effectively shut out of practicing medicine in the US. And if they want to try again next year, that comes with a hefty price tag: It can cost thousands of dollars to apply to residency programs.

Amid the pandemic, both New York and New Jersey have eased some of these licensing requirements so that foreign medical graduates can contribute to the coronavirus response. As the virus continues to spread to rural America, where there was already a shortage of doctors, other states may also have to relax their licensing requirements for foreign grads, or else face imminent shortages.

Graduates of foreign medical schools are at a disadvantage

For “S,” an aspiring doctor from Canada who asked to be identified only by his first initial for fear of harming his residency applications, the decision to attend medical school abroad has put him at a disadvantage in finding a residency placement in both the US and his home country.

He had applied to Canadian medical schools but wasn’t accepted into a single program. That’s not uncommon; medical school admissions are highly competitive in Canada — the average acceptance rate is about 10 percent, compared to nearly 40 percent at US schools.

At the advice of his guidance counselor, “S” opted to attend medical school in the Caribbean instead, where dozens of programs now cater to students seeking to practice medicine in the US. He chose Saint James School of Medicine, spending about 16 months in class there before moving on to clinical rotations in the US. He worked in hospitals in Illinois, New Jersey, and rural Kentucky alongside US medical students and passed his medical licensing exams.

But when it came time to apply for residency programs in the US — a process that costs between $10,000 to $12,000 a year for foreign medical students — he couldn’t get a placement. He has applied three years in a row with no luck, but he knows people who are still applying for the sixth or seventh year in a row. And practicing medicine in Canada, which also has a doctor shortage, isn’t really an option either since hospital residency programs strongly favor Canadian medical school graduates.

“It’s kind of sad, because you’re so close. You have your degree. You just need your foot in the door,” he said. “Especially with coronavirus, you really want to help. You’re in a situation where you have the training.”

After he didn’t match with a residency program this year, he’s planning to work as a physician’s assistant part-time and take up a flexible gig on the side, such as driving for Uber, to help pay off his student loans. He can’t work at a hospital amid the pandemic, but he’s been working with several volunteer organizations to aid coronavirus medical research.

Still, he feels he’s capable of contributing so much more to the pandemic response, especially if he were placed at one of the rural hospitals where he did his clinical rotations, since many of them are facing doctor shortages and a lack of specialists. But instead, he’s stuck in Canada.

“I am one among many sitting on the sideline while this pandemic unravels,” he said. “I have years of training, experience, and medical knowledge but can’t do anything but watch the situation unfold.”

Living in the US or having clinical experience offers no guarantees

Even for foreign medical students who are already living in the US, finding a placement in a residency program can prove difficult.

Sana Javed, a foreign medical school graduate from Pakistan hoping to specialize in psychiatry, lives in Germantown, Tennessee, with her husband, a physician on an H-1B skilled worker visa. He was able to get a waiver for the requirement that he work in Pakistan for two years prior to applying for residency programs in the US because he’s working in a medically underserved area at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital in Memphis.

Javed can get a work permit through him, but she said she didn’t match with a residency program this year, even though she has clinical experience in both the US and Pakistan.

She graduated from Nishtar Medical College & Hospital in Multan, Pakistan, in 2011 and worked for two-and-a-half years alongside doctors treating psychiatric patients — examining their mental status, designing treatment plans, and counseling them — and also volunteered at a military hospital. When she moved to the US in 2016, she worked for a few months as a clinical extern in a psychiatrist’s office in Troy, New York, and has been volunteering for a psychiatrist specializing in addiction medicine since.

Javed is planning to reapply for residency programs in the next application cycle. In the meantime, she is trying to accumulate more clinical experience in the US to improve her application, but the pandemic has made that difficult. Her clinical externship in Chicago that was supposed to start in March was canceled, but she has another one lined up in New York later this year.

She said the field of psychiatry is especially critical during a pandemic and that she’s ready to contribute — but because she doesn’t have a placement in a residency program, her ability to do so is limited.

“With this whole pandemic going on, there are many mental health issues emerging — suicide rates and attempts are increasing, PTSD will be on the rise as we will be nearing the end of this pandemic,” she said. “I am hoping to contribute to the mental health of the people of the United States as much as possible now and even after matching into residency.”

But even if she had more years of clinical experience, it’s not clear whether that would assure her a place in a residency program.

Rizwan Rabbani, who is from Pakistan but attended medical school in China, had over seven years of clinical experience under his belt when he applied to residency programs.

He went back to Pakistan after graduation for a one-year internship in internal medicine, surgery, and urology, and then to work as an internal medicine practitioner in a teaching hospital for five years where he instructed undergraduate medical students.

When he came to the US, he did an eight-month clinical rotation in cardiology at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City and another six-month rotation in family medicine in Pensacola, Florida.

Nevertheless, he failed to match three years in a row. Every time, he had to spend thousands of dollars.

“It’s a money-making process,” he said. “They are making money every time you apply to one program.”

He decided to move back to Pakistan instead, where he’s currently working in the government coronavirus quarantine facilities at a teaching hospital in Lahore. He’s also hoping to practice in the UK instead, where he can start working immediately as a physician with the clinical experience he already has. But he also could have brought that experience to coronavirus patients in the US.

“I would have contributed as a frontline doctor in US hospitals and with my experience and skills, would have been very beneficial,” he said.


Support Vox’s explanatory journalism

Every day at Vox, we aim to answer your most important questions and provide you, and our audience around the world, with information that has the power to save lives. Our mission has never been more vital than it is in this moment: to empower you through understanding. Vox’s work is reaching more people than ever, but our distinctive brand of explanatory journalism takes resources — particularly during a pandemic and an economic downturn. Your financial contribution will not constitute a donation, but it will enable our staff to continue to offer free articles, videos, and podcasts at the quality and volume that this moment requires. Please consider making a contribution to Vox today.

Author: Nicole Narea

Read More

RSS
Follow by Email