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Why Primary Care Is Dying in the U.S.
TL;DR: Primary care in America is in crisis. Medical students are increasingly skipping family medicine, internal medicine, and pediatrics in favor of specialties; as a result, only about one-third of new primary care residency slots are filled by U.S. MD graduates. Meanwhile, roughly 75 million Americans (22% of the population) live in primary care shortage areas, and by 2037 the U.S. is projected to be short ~87,000 primary care physicians. Contributing factors include mass
May 14, 202518 min read


The Medical Exodus: Why U.S. Physicians Are Leaving Medicine
Why are so many doctors burned out and disenfranchised? The answers lie in a mix of workplace pressures and personal factors. Broadly, physicians cite excessive stress and workload (burnout), crushing administrative/EHR burdens, financial pressures, dwindling professional autonomy, and poor work-life balance. Below we break down each factor, citing surveys and expert commentary, before exploring counterpoints, pros/cons, and an overall “justification score” for leaving medici
Apr 30, 20258 min read


Overview of the College Cost Reduction Act (H.R. 6951): What it Means for Medical Students
H.R. 6951 mixes new student aid (more Pell) with stricter borrowing limits and institutional accountability. The House Education & Workforce Committee reported the bill in November 2024 (H.Rept. 118-739), but it has not passed the House as of April 2025. Its fate will depend on legislative priorities, with Republicans championing it as a cost-cutting measure and Democrats criticizing cuts to aid.
Apr 30, 202514 min read
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