When Healthcare Became a Business: Why America Can’t Find Enough Doctors?  — Part 1 of 2 Parts by Metis with some assistance from Dr. Persico

No matter where you live in American today, you will encounter the problem that there is a physician shortage.  It is easy to blame people.  We can ask why more people are not interested in becoming doctors.  The truth is that America does not suffer from a shortage of people who want to become doctors.  It suffers from a healthcare system that systematically limits physician supply, burns out existing doctors, redirects resources toward profit-generating activities, and increasingly treats healthcare as a business rather than a public service.

This issue became more personal for me recently when my wife had three emergency room trips and three overnight stays in the hospital.  One for six days, and two for two days each.  Despite the fact that no definitive prognosis was found, we could not get an appointment with her pulmonologist for over thirty days after her third emergency visit.  My wife was a BA/RN with a master’s degree in public health nursing for over 55 years full time before she retired.  I have an undergraduate degree in Health Education.  None of our credentials mattered.  We were mostly treated like mushrooms.  Kept in the dark and fed manure.  The reasons we were given “Not enough specialty doctors in our area.” 

I have written before about the problems in the American medical system.  The problems have only grown worse.  Here is a brief summary of where the American Medical System ranks on the five statistics that patients care most about in comparison to other countries.

1. Life Expectancy

This is perhaps the single best measure of whether a healthcare system is helping people live long lives.

  • U.S. life expectancy reached about 79 years in 2024.
  • That is roughly two years below the OECD average and among the lowest of developed nations.

Why patients should care:

If a nation spends the most on healthcare but its citizens die younger than those in comparable countries, something is wrong with the system.


2. Preventable and Treatable Deaths

These are deaths that should not occur if people receive timely and effective healthcare.

The U.S. has among the highest rates of avoidable deaths among wealthy countries.

Why patients should care:

This measures not whether doctors are talented, but whether the system gets patients the right care at the right time.

This statistic directly relates to physician shortages and delayed access.


3. Access to Primary Care

Primary care physicians are the “front door” to healthcare.

The U.S. has fewer primary care physicians per capita than many peer nations and faces projected shortages of tens of thousands of doctors in coming years.

Why patients should care:

  • Longer waits for appointments.
  • Delayed diagnosis.
  • Greater use of emergency rooms for routine care.

This may be the statistic most directly connected to your physician-shortage article.


4. Infant Mortality

Infant mortality is often considered one of the most sensitive indicators of a nation’s health system.

The United States continues to have a higher infant mortality rate than many other developed countries.

Why patients should care:

If a healthcare system struggles to keep infants alive during their first year of life, it raises questions about access, prenatal care, and healthcare equity.


5. Healthcare Cost

This is where the United States is number one.

  • The U.S. spends more per person on healthcare than any other nation.
  • Recent estimates place spending at nearly $15,000 per person annually, roughly double many peer countries.

Why patients should care:

Americans are paying luxury-car prices for a healthcare system that often produces middle-of-the-pack—or even worse—results than comparable medical systems in other countries.  The following table shows where the USA ranks against the list of OECD countries.  The OECD currently consists of thirty-eight member nations most of them high-income democracies.

MeasureUnited States
Healthcare SpendingHighest
Life ExpectancyNear Bottom
Preventable DeathsNear Bottom
Primary Care AccessNear Bottom
Infant MortalityNear Bottom
Overall Ranking Among Peer NationsLast

To verify this data – Go to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development site at https://www.oecd.org/en.html

In the blog that follows, I am going to identify some of the major factors that are contributing to the dismal performance of our health care system. 

Factor 1:  The Doctor Shortage

The U.S.  is projected to face a shortage of tens of thousands of physicians over the next decade.  Rural communities are especially affected, but shortages are increasingly appearing in urban areas as well.

  • The Association of American Medical Colleges projects the United States could face a shortage of up to 86,000 physicians by 2036
  • The projected shortage of primary care physicians alone is estimated at 20,200 to 40,400 doctors by 2036. 
  • Only about 24% of U.S.  physicians practice primary care, even though primary care is often the front line for prevention and early diagnosis. 

Factor 2:   Medical School and Residency Bottlenecks

Most people assume the problem is that too few students want to become doctors.

The reality is more complicated.

Every year thousands of qualified students are rejected from medical schools.

Even after graduation, physicians must complete residency training.

The number of residency positions has not kept pace with population growth because Medicare largely funds residency programs and funding has historically been capped.

Result:

  • Fewer physicians enter practice than society needs. 
  • Existing doctors must see more patients. 
  • Wait times increase. 

Healthcare Outcomes

Patients wait longer for:

  • Primary care appointments
  • Specialists
  • Mental health services

Research consistently shows that delayed care leads to:

  • Worse disease outcomes
  • More emergency room visits
  • Higher mortality rates

Factor 3:  Physician Burnout

This may be the most important factor.

  • Nearly half of all physicians reported burnout in 2024.  One major survey found a burnout rate of 49%
  • Although burnout has improved somewhat, 43.2% of physicians still reported symptoms of burnout in 2024, and 41.9% in 2025
  • Primary care physicians consistently report some of the highest burnout rates in medicine.

Many physicians report spending nearly as much time on:

  • Documentation
  • Electronic medical records
  • Insurance approvals
  • Billing requirements

as they spend caring for patients.

Doctors often describe themselves as data-entry clerks with medical degrees.

The Commercialization of the Medical System plays a key role in Doctor Burnout.  While it does not directly reduce the number of medical graduates.  Instead, it can make physicians less willing to remain in practice.

Think of it as a retention problem.

Doctors often cite:

  • Loss of autonomy
  • Productivity quotas
  • Administrative burden
  • Corporate oversight

as reasons for burnout.

When experienced physicians retire early, the effective shortage grows.

Healthcare Outcomes

Burnout contributes to:

  • Earlier retirement
  • Reduced patient access
  • Medical errors
  • Lower patient satisfaction

The average patient often experiences this as:

  • Rushed appointments
  • Less physician attention
  • Difficulty obtaining follow-up care

Factor 4:  Aging Population

America’s population is getting older.

Older adults consume significantly more healthcare resources.

The Baby Boom generation is moving into years where:

  • Cancer rates rise
  • Heart disease increases
  • Joint replacements become common
  • Chronic illnesses multiply

Demand is increasing faster than physician supply.

Healthcare Outcomes

More patients compete for the same physicians.

Wait times lengthen.

Primary care becomes increasingly difficult to access.

Factor 5:  Geographic Maldistribution

The United States may not have a pure national shortage as much as a distribution problem.

Doctors tend to locate in:

  • Wealthier communities
  • Urban areas
  • Regions with better reimbursement

Rural America often struggles to attract physicians.

Arizona experiences this challenge in many communities outside Phoenix and Tucson.  We live in Arizona City, and the selection of specialists is poor to non-existent here.  We are fifty miles from Phoenix and fifty miles from Tucson.  Depending on the time of day, it can take two to three hours to get to some areas of Phoenix and two hours to get to some areas of Tucson. 

Healthcare Outcomes

Rural patients experience:

  • Longer travel times
  • Delayed diagnosis
  • Higher mortality rates for many conditions

Factor 6:  Commercialization of Healthcare

This is where the story becomes particularly interesting.

Many Americans still imagine hospitals as community institutions.

Increasingly they are large corporate enterprises.

Over the past forty years:

  • Independent physician practices declined. 
  • Corporate healthcare systems expanded. 
  • Investor-owned hospital chains grew. 
  • Private equity entered healthcare. 

Healthcare increasingly became a business sector rather than a public service sector.

Hospital mergers and physician acquisitions frequently increase prices without corresponding improvements in quality.

Factor 7:  Hospital Consolidations

  • The percentage of physicians employed by or affiliated with hospital systems increased from less than 30% in 2012 to at least 47% in 2024.
    • More than three-quarters of U.S.  doctors are now employed by health systems or corporations rather than practicing independently. 

Thousands of hospitals merged into large regional systems.

Proponents argued consolidation would:

  • Reduce costs
  • Improve efficiency
  • Improve quality

The evidence is mixed.

Many studies suggest consolidation often results in:

  • Higher prices
  • Greater market power
  • Increased administrative costs

Studies reviewed by the Government Accountability Office found that physician and hospital consolidation is generally associated with higher prices and spending, with limited evidence of corresponding quality improvements.  Read my blog called, “When Bigger is Not Better.”

Factor 8:  Administrative Growth vs Physician Growth

One of the most striking trends is that administrative staffing has grown much faster than physician staffing.

Hospitals employ:

  • Compliance officers
  • Revenue cycle managers
  • Coders
  • Contract specialists
  • Marketing personnel
  • Financial analysts

Many are necessary. 

But the growth rate has greatly exceeded physician growth.  According to one statistic administrators now outnumber physicians by roughly 10 to 1 in some healthcare systems.

Critics argue the system increasingly rewards administration rather than caregiving.

Healthcare Outcomes

More money flows toward administration.

Less is available for:

  • Physician recruitment
  • Nursing support
  • Patient services
NEW YORK, NEW YORK – DECEMBER 19: People demonstrating against the healthcare industry

Factor 9:  Private Equity and Physician Practices

This is a newer development and one that many people do not know about.

  • Approximately 6.5% of physicians worked in private-equity-owned practices in 2024, up from 4.5% in 2022. 

While still a minority of practices, the trend is moving rapidly.

Private equity firms increasingly purchase:

  • Physician groups
  • Emergency departments
  • Specialty practices

Their objective is generally to increase profitability and eventually sell the practice.

Critics argue this creates pressure for:

  • Higher patient volumes
  • More procedures
  • Cost cutting

Before concluding Part 1, lets summarize the human cost of the physician shortage in the USA and the attendant commercialism health care in America.

The Human Cost

The physician shortage ultimately affects patients through:

Longer Wait Times

Patients may wait months for specialists.

Reduced Preventive Care

Diseases are detected later.

Overcrowded Emergency Rooms

ERs become substitutes for primary care.

Physician Fatigue

Burned-out physicians are more likely to leave practice.

Health Disparities

Rural and low-income populations suffer most.

Treatment Outcomes

You may die from something that could have been treated with earlier diagnosis.

So Where Do the Profits Go:

Consider this paradox.  The United States spends nearly twice as much per person on healthcare as many other high-income countries.  Yet Americans generally do not live longer, have better access to doctors, or enjoy better health outcomes.  If the additional money is not producing better results, where is it going?

After all this discussion about Health Care becoming a business instead of a human service, the obvious question is “Where do the profits go?”  There are five main actors in this picture.  I would like to call them “villains’ but Metis who is the main author of this piece refuses to let me use this terminology.  Hence, here are the five major actors who share in the money pie. 

  • Hospital CEO Compensation
  • Administrative Growth and Costs
  • Insurance Company Profits
  • Pharmaceutical Profits
  • Private Equity Returns/Profits

The easiest way to view the answer to the distribution of profits is to look at a pie chart:

Who Is the Villain?  Or is there a Villain?

Whenever Americans discuss healthcare, there is a tendency to look for a villain.  Some blame insurance companies.  Others blame pharmaceutical firms, hospital executives, private equity investors, politicians, or even doctors themselves.  While each of these groups deserves scrutiny, focusing on any single villain misses the larger truth.

The real problem is not one person, one company, or even one industry.  The real problem is the system.

Edwards Deming, the quality management expert, often argued that most organizational failures are caused by systems rather than individuals.  If Deming were alive today, he would tell us to stop looking for villains and start looking at incentives.  Why does the American healthcare system produce higher costs, physician shortages, burnout, and poorer outcomes than many comparable nations despite spending more money than any other country on Earth?

The answer lies in the way the system is structured.

Every major participant in healthcare—hospitals, insurance companies, pharmaceutical firms, physician groups, investors, and government agencies—is responding to incentives that reward revenue growth, complexity, and market power.  Over time, these incentives have created a healthcare system that increasingly behaves like a business rather than a public service.

Where does the money go?  The largest portion of it disappears into administrative complexity.  The United States has built one of the most complicated healthcare financing systems in the world.  Hospitals and physician practices employ armies of billers, coders, compliance officers, contract specialists, lawyers, and administrators simply to navigate the rules.  Physicians spend countless hours on documentation, insurance approvals, and billing requirements instead of patient care. This complexity contributes directly to physician burnout and rising costs.

Other high-income nations are not perfect, but many have simpler systems, stronger primary care networks, and greater control over prices.  As a result, they often achieve comparable or better outcomes while spending far less.

My wife once had a visiting nurse from Sweden come to North Memorial Medical Center where my wife was a nurse manager.  Karen was asked to take the visiting nurse and show her around the hospital for the day.  She enjoyed the day with the nurse.  When Karen came home that evening, she told me about the visit and some of the things that surprised her.  This was back in 2005 before Karen retired the first time. 

Karen took the nurse to the business center where the people were working on billing and insurance issues.  North Memorial was then a 4500 employee hospital and the visiting nurse came from one of comparable size in Sweden.  In North Memorial over 200 people were employed in billing and medical coding processes.  Karen was shocked to find that in the visiting nurse’s hospital (ALMOST THE SAME SIZE) only three people were employed.  Why?  Because they had a single payer system with only one place to bill.  In the United States, hospital billing can be bewilderingly complex.

A large American hospital may deal with dozens or even hundreds of insurance plans, each with its own reimbursement rules, approval requirements, referral procedures, and appeals processes. What appears to be fifty insurance companies may actually represent hundreds or even thousands of distinct billing arrangements.  The result is a healthcare system that requires armies of administrators simply to get paid.

A small rural hospital might have:

  • 20–50 major payer contracts

A medium-sized regional hospital might have:

  • 50–100 payer contracts

A large urban hospital system may have:

  • 100–300 payer contracts

So who is the villain?

The villain is a system that rewards complexity over simplicity, treatment over prevention, administration over caregiving, and financial performance over patient outcomes. Most of the people working within the system are trying to do their jobs well. The problem is that the system often pushes them in the wrong direction.

Until we address those underlying incentives, physician shortages, rising costs, and patient frustration will remain symptoms of a deeper disease.  The challenge before us is not to find someone to blame.  It is to build a healthcare system that rewards the outcomes patients actually care about: timely access to care, affordable treatment, healthier lives, and better results.

Conclusion

America spends more on healthcare than any nation in history, yet millions struggle to find timely access to a physician.  The problem is not a lack of talent or technology.  The problem is a system that prioritizes financial performance over system performance.  As hospitals consolidate, private equity expands, and administrative complexity grows, physicians increasingly find themselves serving the business of healthcare rather than the practice of medicine.  Until we address these systemic issues, doctor shortages will remain a symptom of a deeper disease within American healthcare itself.

If the United States spends more on healthcare than any nation in the world, why do so many patients struggle to find a doctor, wait months for appointments, and feel lost in the system? 

If you want more data or resources on any of the subjects I have discussed above, you can find substantial data and references on the following sites.  These organizations provide some of the most widely cited and respected data on healthcare spending, physician workforce trends, access to care, and international healthcare outcomes.

1. OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development)

Best source for:

  • International healthcare spending
  • Life expectancy
  • Physician supply
  • Infant mortality
  • Cross-country comparisons

OECD Health Statistics

General OECD site:

OECD Official Website


2. Commonwealth Fund

Best source for:

  • International healthcare rankings
  • “Mirror, Mirror” reports
  • Comparisons of U.S. healthcare to other wealthy nations
  • Access, equity, and outcomes

The Commonwealth Fund


3. AAMC (Association of American Medical Colleges)

Best source for:

  • Physician shortages
  • Residency bottlenecks
  • Medical school enrollment
  • Workforce projections

Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC)


4. KFF (formerly Kaiser Family Foundation)

Best source for:

  • Healthcare costs
  • Insurance statistics
  • Medicare and Medicaid
  • Hospital consolidation
  • Easy-to-understand charts and graphs

KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation)

KFF Health System Tracker

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In Part 2, we will look at what is driving the commercialization of hospitals and why they have become places of profit rather than service.  We will also look at some possible antidotes to the commercialization infecting the American Medical System.  Some of these solutions will address:

  • Expanding residency funding. 
  • Reducing administrative burden. 
  • Increasing primary care reimbursement. 
  • Encouraging independent physician practices. 
  • Scrutinizing hospital mergers more aggressively. 
  • Increasing transparency in healthcare pricing. 
  • Developing rural physician incentives. 
  • Measuring healthcare success by patient outcomes rather than revenue generation. 

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