Monday, July 23, 2007

Physicain Drain in (Rural) Upstate New York

It's similar in other rural areas, I'd wager...

From The New York Times

While newly licensed doctors flock to New York City, Long Island and Westchester County, where there is already a glut, far fewer choose to practice in the vast upstate region. For instance, during the years the study was conducted, Essex County in the Adirondacks lost 22 percent of its doctors, while there was a 19 percent increase in Nassau County, on Long Island.

And as doctors upstate retire — one-third of the physicians in Binghamton are 55 or older — recruiting replacements is becoming more difficult. “I worry that new physicians may not see certain areas in the state as viable or attractive,” Ms. Moore said.

There is little question why, since statistics show a steady exodus of jobs and a decline in prosperity in upstate New York. In the last three decades, the population drain has contributed to New York’s loss of Congressional seats, to 29 today from 39, and state figures show that the number of 20- to 34-year-olds in the region decreased by 22 percent in the 1990s.

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