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Long Waits To See Doctors In Puerto Rico, Where Medical Needs Are Great Post-Maria

Analysis  |  By PBS News Hour  
   July 20, 2018

Physicians say running a medical practice is a losing business in Puerto Rico.

This article appeared July 20, 2018 on Kaiser Health News.

This story also ran on PBS NewsHour

Physicians are in short supply in Puerto Rico.

From 2006 to 2016, the number of doctors on the island declined from 14,000 to 9,000, according the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Puerto Rico. And Hurricane Maria has helped fuel the exodus.

Dr. José Cruz, a pediatrician with a practice in Ponce, said the island's ongoing financial crisis and low payments from health insurers drove many physicians to seek work in the States.

Physicians say running a medical practice is a losing business in Puerto Rico. At San Jorge Children's Hospital in San Juan, a pediatrician earning about $89,000 a year can double his salary just by moving to the States.

The low salaries reflect the island's widespread poverty. Nearly 2 in 3 children — and half of all Puerto Ricans — rely on Medicaid, and the territory receives far less money from Congress to pay doctors than do low-income states.


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