5 Issues Facing Medical Schools

Despite the noise and groaning, medical school applications continue to grow, driven by many factors. However, the medical school education model dates back to the Flexner report issued in 1910.. Many are trying to address the challenges of how to train the biomedical research and practice workforce to win the 4th industrial revolution, but progress has been slow.

Medical educators will face 5 basic problems in the coming years:

Demonstrating the Value of Medical Education and Training 

According to a new AAMC study, 76% of students graduate with debt. And while that percentage has decreased in the last few years, those who do borrow for medical school face big loans: the median debt was $192,000 in 2018. At private schools, 21% of students have debt of $300,000 or more. The average four-year cost for public school students is $243,902. For private school students, the cost is $322,767. Many medical students in debt marry other medical students in debt. Do the math and the implications of career and family planning, housing and specialty choice.

Some are questioning whether it is still worth being a doctor.

Accomodating the Market Demand for Non-Clinical Career Opportunities 

Medical students are forgoing residencies, practitioners are abbreviating their clinical careers, side gigs and hustles are hot and many want to create patient value other than seeing 20 a day for their entire career. Physician entrepreneurship is finally getting its rightful due, yet few medical schools offer education and training in it, let alone the business of medicine. There are few entrepreneurial medical schools.

Declining Revenues From Research Grants, Clinal Earnings and State Support 

Major consolidation and the expansion of academic integrated delivery networks means the rich get richer and poor get poorer. NIH funding uncertainty is pervasive. Some states have withdrawn funding from their public medical schools. Reforms in clinical practice reimbursement will lead to decreasing revenues. Many schools are reaching out to create partnerships with industry with ethical and professional conduct threats. More are relying on philanthropreneurs to put their names on buildings. Many have repacked their technology transfer offices and rebranded them as innovation centers.

Defining New Learning Objectives and Curriculum Reform

We need to stop graduating knowledge technicians. Recruiting the traditional triple threat to lead departments is a dead model. Domain expertise needs to be supplemented with communication, creativity, collaboration and complex problem solving to address the social determinants of health and other wicked problems.

Fixing the Toxic Culture of Medical Education and Training the Lack of Diversity 

How many more times do we need to read about physician burnout, stress, mental health issues and suicide? When will we fix how we recruit applicants and faculty to create a more diverse and inclusive talent pipeline?

Higher education feeds the medical school pipeline and has its own problems that need to be fixed.

There are many parts to the contemporary economic bubble diagram and medical schools could be one of them is they don't address these problems.

Arlen Meyers, MD, MBA is the President and CEO of the Society of Physician Entrepreneurs.

Share this article

Leave your comments

Post comment as a guest

  • Tom Phillip

    What a wonderful article !!!

  • Jennifer Grace

    People complain a lot about millennial doctors but this makes me hopeful for our future!

  • Alisha Yates

    Medicine used to be in the hands of the shaman, and paperwork was never a part of it. These are the exact reasons why I lean towards Law instead of neurosurgery; even the most complicated surgical technicians are bound by the beaurocracy of our healthcare system.

  • Jesse Meade

    Very heartfelt and inspirational.

  • Eduard Komar

    Really interesting to see this from the perspective of a physician

  • Sean Maguire

    I hope this spreads and makes a good difference.

  • Susannah Bailin

    Bravo! My daughter graduated last May and is in her first year of residency. You are exactly right. In addition, there aren't enough spots for brilliant applicants due to the focus on the MCAT and grades without any correlation to the difficulty of the class ie. particular college /university. As a healthcare entrepreneur, I applaud you for including #2!