Sponsor

wnyc.org / 93.9fm / am 820

Not Enough Primary Care Doctors in Poor Neighborhoods: Report

Monday, December 05, 2011 - 07:16 PM

Hundreds of thousands of uninsured New Yorkers may get health coverage in the coming years, as federal health care reform takes effect. But city health officials are concerned there might not be enough doctors, nurses, clinics and private practices to see the newly insured.

A new report surveyed the landscape before the Affordable Care Act and found wide disparities in the supply of primary care providers.

“If people are living in low-income neighborhoods, there are not enough primary care physicians around,” Health Commission Dr. Thomas Farley said. “So a lot of people don’t get the primary, preventive care they need.”

The study suggests it’s a very local problem: the city has twice as many primary care providers, overall, as federal authorities recommend, but some neighborhoods lag far behind. The city’s least covered neighborhood, in the North Bronx, has 34 primary care providers per 100,000 people, compared to a national recommendation that a community have 50. The most-covered neighborhood, the Upper East Side, has 261 providers per 100,000.

 

 

(Graphic: Full-time equivalent primary care physicians by United Hopsital Fund Neighborhood, NYC, 2009.)

Massachusetts, which implemented its own healthcare reform under Governor Mitt Romney, has reported physician shortages sometimes leading to longer waits for doctors' appointments. The state has 95 percent of its population insured, more than any other state.

Farley said local communities should brace for the mix of good and bad news, when and if broader coverage comes to New York.

Peter Cunningham, from the Center for Studying Health System Change, says that there may be less to the disparity laid out by the Health Department than meets the eye, because unlike some rural and suburban areas, New York City has good public transportation.

Much, he said, depends on the number of community clinics, where low-income people frequently receive care, and on the proportion of medical practices willing to accept Medicaid. Neither aspect is addressed by the city’s report.

Tags:

More in:

Comments [4]

Hi,

SideEffectshub.com provides helpful and accurate consumer health information about the side effects that typically arise from the use of prescription or over the counter medications, natural or health supplements and even certain types of food.

<a href="http://sideeffectshub.com/">Side Effects</a>

Dec. 14 2011 01:03 PM
Vote this comment up Vote this comment down Score: 0/0
Pamela Ritche from Canada

Hi,

SideEffectshub.com provides helpful and accurate consumer health information about the side effects that typically arise from the use of prescription or over the counter medications, natural or health supplements and even certain types of food.

<a href="http://sideeffectshub.com/">Side Effects</a>

Dec. 14 2011 12:59 PM
Vote this comment up Vote this comment down Score: 0/0
Paul from Bronx

Primary care doctors? What about Nurse Practitioners? NPs provide a significant proportion of primary care to those in underserved areas, and leaving them out of this piece gives an inaccurate picture of who's caring for NYC's medically underserved.

Dec. 06 2011 10:05 PM
Vote this comment up Vote this comment down Score: 0/0
Obamacare sucks from escondido, California

Welcome to the Medicaid Ghetto middle class. This is your future. Rationing.

http://www.cobrahealth.com/Obamacare-rationing.html

Dec. 05 2011 11:40 PM
Vote this comment up Vote this comment down Score: 0/0

Leave a Comment

Register for your own account so you can vote on comments, save your favorites, and more. Learn more.
Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. Names are displayed with all comments. We reserve the right to edit any comments posted on this site. Please read the Comment Guidelines before posting. By leaving a comment, you agree to New York Public Radio's Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use.







URL

If you enter anything in this field your comment will be treated as spam
Location
* Denotes a required field

WHAT'S ON

Audio Help Schedule

Sponsored

Feeds

Supported by