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Health & Medical News

Shortage of Doctors Affects Rural U.S.

Friday, July 20, 2007 11:37:05 PM
By CHRIS TALBOTT

Dr. Vaishali Shah, an internist in Greenwood, Miss., is photographed in her office,  May 2, 2007, recalls the long process Shah and her pulmonologist husband, Dr. Rohit Panchal, undertook to arrive in this Mississippi Delta town where they ply their medical skills in an underserved area in exchange for shortcuts to eventually securing permanent residency in the U.S.  (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)GREENWOOD, Miss. (AP) - A national shortage of doctors is hitting poor places the hardest, and efforts to bring in foreign physicians to fill the gap are running into a knot of restrictions from the war on terror and the immigration debate.

Doctors recruited from places such as India, the Philippines and sub-Saharan Africa to work in underserved areas like the Mississippi Delta and the lonesome West already face an arduous and expensive gauntlet of agencies, professional tests and background checks to secure work papers and permanent residency.

Those restrictions have only tightened in the years since 9-11, and now many believe the process will become more difficult after the attempted terrorist bombings in Britain that have been linked to foreign doctors.


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