With New York having 82 medical residents and Massachusetts
having 84 per 100,000/population, Florida is hard at work to catch up, to fill
the gap of shortages of residents with our FAU (Florida Atlantic University) playing
a big part. Florida had about 19 physicians
in training per 100,000/population and placed 42nd in the United
States. About 25% of Florida’s physicians are over age 65.
Three local community hospitals will be benefiting from
the new Florida Atlantic University (FAU) physician residency program. Recently there were 36 medical school
graduates, who will be employed at Boca Regional Medical Center, Delray Medical
Center and Bethesda West (near Boyton Beach), and these medical centers are
becoming academic teaching hospitals. About
half of these grads will be at Boca Raton Regional. The new physicians will be
using the FAU Medical Simulation Centers and Boca Raton and West Palm Beach to
learn about high risk procedures, and connected to FAU’s Boca Raton campus
through conferencing and virtual classrooms.
While serving hospital patients, two new FAU outpatient
clinics are coming to Boca Raton Regional and Bethesda West where these
residents will provide primary care and conduct wellness programs in the
communities. Thirty-nine percent have
roots in Florida. They begin working on
July 1. FAU’s College of Medicine’s program began in 2011 with 64
students, who will be eligible to be residents after next year’s graduation. FAU’s goal is within three years to grow to
96 physicians in their new internal medicine residency and to 400 within five
years, serving at the three hospitals above and adding St. Mary’s Medical
Center in West Palm Beach and the West Boca Medical Center. The college medical association says that 47% of doctors set
up practices where they complete their residency, making friends in the area,
establishing roots, working with colleagues, buying a property and finding a
partner. Half the current graduates will
be working at Boca Raton Regional.
Dr. David Bjorkman, Dean of the FAU College of Medicine
says that FAU is awaiting approval from its accrediting body on a surgical
residency and developing programs in emergency medicine, psychiatry, pediatrics
and considering other programs. Dr.
Charles Posternack, Chief Medical Officer at Boca Raton Regional, said that “the
physician trainees will being patient care to a new level…academic medical
centers perform research that benefits patients locally and around the world,
and become a magnet to physicians”.
Boca Raton Regional has been aiming to transition into a
teaching hospital for the past seven years and their working together with FAU
has brought new and wonderful benefits to our area.
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