‘Nobody wants to come’: What if the U.S. can no longer attract immigrant physicians?
2025/11/25 2 Comments
Sad that Canada not on the list:
…”This is a real pivotal moment right now where decades of progress could be at risk,” says Dr. Julie Gralow, chief medical officer at the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
She says policies defunding everything from scientific research to public health have damaged the U.S.’s reputation to the point where she hears from hospitals and universities that top international talent are no longer interested in coming to America. “Up until this year, it was a dream — a wish! — that you could get a job and you could come to the U.S. And now nobody wants to come.”
Gralow says, meanwhile, other countries like China, Denmark, Germany and Australia are taking advantage by recruiting international talent away from the U.S. — including American-born doctors and medical researchers — by promising stable grant funding and state-of-the-art facilities abroad.
American patients will feel the rippling impact from that, Gralow says, for generations.
Immigrant physicians have historically found jobs in U.S. communities with serious health care staff shortages to begin with, so those places also stand to see more impact from curtailed international hiring, says Michael Liu, the Boston medical resident.
He points to his own recent co-authored research in JAMA estimating that 11,000 doctors, or roughly 1% of the country’s physicians, currently have H1B visas. “That might seem like a small number, but this percentage varied widely across geographies,” he said, and they tend to congregate in the least-resourced areas, reaching up to 40% of physicians in some communities….
Source: ‘Nobody wants to come’: What if the U.S. can no longer attract immigrant physicians?

The medical cartels (I mean provincial medical associations) lobby hard to prevent it. I have a good friend whose wife is a Czech-trained physician. And while she has Canadian citizenship, she is not permitted to practice in Canada. So they live and work in Prague, where she can practice.
Cartels (or guilds if you want to be somewhat polite)! She is not the only one caught up in this. Have always thought if we solve the PT accreditation issues domestically, it would also largely address international trained professionals.