In a revealing analysis published in JAMA, researchers from the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute have uncovered critical shortcomings in federal initiatives intended to bolster the U.S. physician workforce, particularly within primary care and rural settings. The investigation meticulously tracked the allocation of 1,000 new Medicare-funded residency positions between 2023 and 2025, mandated by legislation passed in 2021 and 2023, aimed at addressing persistent physician shortages. Despite explicit statutory goals prioritizing underserved medical specialties and geographic areas, data suggest these efforts have not fully translated into effective distribution, raising fundamental concerns about how healthcare workforce policies are operationalized in practice.
The U.S. healthcare system continues to grapple with a swelling deficit of physicians, a crisis most acute in fields such as primary care and psychiatry, along with rural locales that historically face stark disparities in access to health services. These shortages compromise not only timely patient care but also exacerbate adverse health outcomes across vulnerable populations. In response, Congress enacted two laws that pledged the infusion of new residency slots, with special emphasis on allocating at least 10% to rural areas and bolstering specialties identified as shortage categories. However, the study’s analysis reveals a disconnect between policy intent and real-world execution that threatens to undermine these legislative ambitions.
Led by senior author Hao Yu, an associate professor of population medicine at Harvard Medical School, the research team employed comprehensive national datasets to compare the geographic and specialty composition of residency placements pre- and post-legislation. Their approach meticulously scrutinized shifts in the allocation of these federally funded positions relative to a 2021 baseline, illuminating nuanced trends in how the physician pipeline is evolving under recent policy directives. The results suggest while some progress has been achieved, particularly in psychiatry, the broader distribution landscape remains misaligned with stated priorities, especially for primary care and rural health infrastructure.
One of the most striking findings is the disproportionate growth favoring psychiatry residencies, which absorbed more than half of the new positions in 2023 and experienced a 12.5% increase since 2021. By contrast, primary care specialties—historically vital for comprehensive community health—saw their share shrink dramatically from over half of these positions to just under one-third. This inversion raises urgent questions about whether current policy mechanisms adequately incentivize the training and retention of physicians in foundational care roles, which are essential for managing chronic diseases, preventive care, and health promotion at the population level.
The spatial distribution of new residency slots further underscores the challenges in targeting healthcare equity. While initial allocations complied fully with laws requiring placements in shortage-designated areas, adherence declined under the 2023 law, with only about 82% of new positions situated in these underserved zones. Even more concerning is the failure to meet the 10% rural allocation benchmark, with rural placements plummeting to a mere 1% in recent rounds—far below what the legislation envisaged. This pattern signals systemic barriers in deploying medical training resources to the very communities that stand to benefit most from enhanced medical presence.
The findings carry profound implications for policymakers and healthcare planners. Merely increasing the number of residency slots will not suffice to alleviate physician shortages unless distribution criteria are strengthened and rigorously enforced. The persistent underrepresentation of rural areas and primary care specialties reveals structural inefficiencies that risk perpetuating healthcare disparities and undermining population health objectives. Innovative policy designs must integrate mechanisms that ensure alignment between funding, specialty training priorities, and geographic needs, coupled with supportive infrastructure investments to sustain physician practice in underserved regions.
This research contributes to a growing body of evidence on the complex dynamics governing the healthcare workforce, emphasizing that policy formulation alone cannot guarantee equitable health system outcomes. Implementation fidelity—how well policies are carried out in practice—is equally crucial. The persistence of misaligned residency placements highlights the necessity for ongoing monitoring, evaluation, and adaptive strategies to ensure that government-funded programs fulfill their intended goals. Moreover, the study underscores the importance of coupling residency expansion efforts with broader health system reforms addressing retention, workload, compensation, and supportive practice environments.
Authors Tarun Ramesh and Hao Yu underscore that addressing the physician shortage crisis requires a recalibration of current approaches towards more targeted, accountable, and context-sensitive frameworks. Their findings advocate for enhanced regulatory requirements explicitly mandating primary care and rural training slots, coupled with incentives that make these career pathways viable and attractive to medical graduates. Without such concerted efforts, the physician pipeline risks channeling talent disproportionately into specialties and locations that do not fully reflect public health priorities, thereby exacerbating existing disparities.
The research methodology intertwines policy analysis with empirical data aggregation, revealing how strategic oversight or lack thereof can significantly influence healthcare workforce dynamics. By leveraging robust datasets and longitudinal tracking, the study offers a granular perspective on evolving trends in specialty selection and geographic allocation among new residency positions. This methodological rigor strengthens the validity of the conclusions drawn and provides an actionable evidence base for stakeholders seeking to reform physician workforce policies.
The investigation’s broader lesson echoes throughout the healthcare sector: addressing inequities in provider distribution is multifaceted, demanding not only legislative will but also practical implementation strategies and systemic support. Achieving healthcare workforce equity requires sustained commitment across policy levels, resource allocation, and infrastructure development. Without thoughtful integration of these elements, efforts to expand residency positions risk falling short, leaving rural and underserved populations vulnerable to ongoing physician scarcity and compromised health outcomes.
In summary, this seminal study draws attention to the disconnect between policy ambition and execution in federal residency expansion programs. By highlighting the imbalance favoring psychiatry growth over primary care and the persistent neglect of rural communities despite legislative mandates, the research calls for a reevaluation of how residency positions are allocated and regulated. Going forward, the imperative lies in designing and implementing policies that not only increase training capacity but also effectively channel physician resources to specialties and geographies where they are most necessary, ensuring equitable access to care for all Americans.
Subject of Research: Analysis of Medicare-funded residency position allocation with emphasis on specialty and geographic distribution.
Article Title: Changes in Specialty and Geography of Medicare’s New Residency Positions.
News Publication Date: June 15, 2026.
Web References: https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2026.7929
References: Ramesh T, Tsai T, Yu H. Changes in Specialty and Geography of Medicare’s New Residency Positions. JAMA. Published June 15, 2026. doi:10.1001/jama.2026.7929
Keywords: Physician workforce, Medicare residency positions, primary care, psychiatry, rural health, healthcare policy, healthcare disparities, residency allocation, physician shortage, health equity, medical training, healthcare access.
