In the early 1970s, affirmative-action programs were introduced to accomplish a number of social goals, including increasing the supply of minority physicians and improving the health care of the poor. To assess the success of such programs, we analyzed data on people who graduated from U.S. medical schools in 1975 to determine how specialty choice, practice locations, patient populations served, and board-certification rates differ between minority and nonminority graduates. A larger proportion of minority graduates (55 per cent vs. 41 per cent, P less than 0.001) chose the primary-care specialties of family practice, general internal medicine, general pediatrics, and obstetrics-gynecology. Significantly more minority physicians (12 per cent vs. 6 per cent, P less than 0.01) practiced in locations designated as health-manpower shortage areas by the federal government and had more Medicaid recipients in their patient populations (31 per cent for blacks, 24 per cent for Hispanics, 14 per cent for whites; P less than 0.001). Physicians from each racial or ethnic group served disproportionately more patients of their own racial or ethnic group (P less than 0.001), but minority physicians did not serve significantly more persons from other racial or ethnic minority groups than did nonminority physicians. Many minority physicians served patient populations much like those of their nonminority colleagues, which indicates that substantial integration of the medical marketplace has taken place. Significantly fewer minority graduates had become board-certified by 1984 (48 per cent vs. 80 per cent, P less than 0.001), and most of this disparity was associated with differences in premedical-school characteristics and in the patient populations they served. Our analysis shows that minority graduates of the medical school class of 1975 are fulfilling many of the objectives of affirmative-action programs.
This article has been cited by other articles:
Saha, S., Shipman, S. A.
(2008). Race-Neutral Versus Race-Conscious Workforce Policy To Improve Access To Care. Health Aff (Millwood)
27: 234-245
[Abstract][Full Text]
McGinnis, S., Moore, J., Continelli, T.
(2006). Practice patterns of underrepresented minority nurse practitioners in new york state, 2000.. Policy Politics Nursing Practice
7: 35-44
[Abstract]
Ibrahim, S. A., Zhang, A., Mercer, M. B., Baughman, M., Kwoh, C. K.
(2004). Inner City African-American Elderly Patients' Perceptions and Preferences for the Care of Chronic Knee and Hip Pain: Findings From Focus Groups. Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences
59: 1318-1322
[Abstract][Full Text]
Powe, N. R., Cooper, L. A.
(2004). Diversifying the Racial and Ethnic Composition of the Physician Workforce. ANN INTERN MED
141: 223-224
[Full Text]
Cohen, J. J.
(2003). The Consequences of Premature Abandonment of Affirmative Action in Medical School Admissions. JAMA
289: 1143-1149
[Abstract][Full Text]
Coffman, J. M., Rosenoff, E., Grumbach, K.
(2001). Racial/Ethnic Disparities In Nursing. Health Aff (Millwood)
20: 263-272
[Abstract][Full Text]
Brotherton, S. E., Stoddard, J. J., Tang, S.-f. S.
(2000). Minority and Nonminority Pediatricians' Care of Minority and Poor Children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med
154: 912-917
[Abstract][Full Text]
Stoddard, J. J., Back, M. R., Brotherton, S. E.
(2000). The Respective Racial and Ethnic Diversity of US Pediatricians and American Children. Pediatrics
105: 27-31
[Abstract][Full Text]
Saha, S., Komaromy, M., Koepsell, T. D., Bindman, A. B.
(1999). Patient-Physician Racial Concordance and the Perceived Quality and Use of Health Care. Arch Intern Med
159: 997-1004
[Abstract][Full Text]
Baumgartner, L., Stenersen, S., Campbell, K.
(1996). Overcoming Barriers to Evaluating Federal Health Education and Training Programs. Eval Health Prof
19: 292-310
[Abstract]
Komaromy, M., Grumbach, K., Drake, M., Vranizan, K., Lurie, N., Keane, D., Bindman, A. B.
(1996). The Role of Black and Hispanic Physicians in Providing Health Care for Underserved Populations. NEJM
334: 1305-1310
[Abstract][Full Text]
Steinbrook, R.
(1996). Diversity in Medicine. NEJM
334: 1327-1328
[Full Text]
Moy, E., Bartman, B. A.
(1995). Physician Race and Care of Minority and Medically Indigent Patients. JAMA
273: 1515-1520
[Abstract]
Li, L. B., Williams, S. D., Scammon, D. L.
(1995). Practicing With the Urban Underserved: A Qualitative Analysis of Motivations, Incentives, and Disincentives. Arch Fam Med
4: 124-133
[Abstract]
Rivo, M. L., Satcher, D.
(1993). Improving Access to Health Care Through Physician Workforce Reform: Directions for the 21st Century. JAMA
270: 1074-1078
[Abstract]
Potts, J. T. Jr.
(1992). Recruitment of Minority Physicians into Careers in Internal Medicine. ANN INTERN MED
116: 1099-1102
[Abstract]
Lloyd, S. M. Jr, Miller, R. L.
(1989). Black Student Enrollment in US Medical Schools. JAMA
261: 272-274
[Abstract]
SCHROEDER, S. A.
(1987). The Health Manpower Challenge to Internal Medicine. ANN INTERN MED
106: 768-770
[Abstract]
Knopke, H. J., Northrup, R. S., Hartman, J. A.
(1986). Bio-Prep: A Premedical Program for Rural High School Students. JAMA
256: 2548-2551
[Abstract]