Mary Mullens, age 93, in her room
at Edgewood Summit Retirement Community in Charleston, W.Va. Mullens is a
patient of Dr. Todd Goldberg, one of only 36 geriatricians in the state. Kara Lofton/West Virginia Public
Broadcasting
At Edgewood Summit retirement
community in Charleston, W.Va., 93-year-old Mary Mullens is waxing eloquent
about her geriatrician, Dr. Todd
Goldberg.
"He's sure got a lot to
do," she says, "and does it so well."
West Virginia has the third oldest
population in the nation, right behind Maine and Florida. But Goldberg is one
of only 36 geriatricians
in the state.
"With the growing elderly
population across America and West Virginia, obviously we need healthcare
providers," says Goldberg.
That includes geriatricians —
physicians who specialize in the treatment of adults age 65 and older — as well
as nurses, physical therapists, and psychologists who know how to care
for this population.
"The current workforce is inadequately trained
and inadequately prepared to deal with what's been called the silver tsunami —
a tidal wave of elderly people — increasing in the population in West Virginia,
across America,
and across the world really," Goldberg says.
The deficit
of properly trained physicians is expected to get worse. By 2030,
one in five Americans will be eligible for Medicare, the government health
insurance for those 65 and older.
Goldberg also teaches at the
Charleston division of West Virginia University, and runs one of the state's
four geriatric fellowship programs for medical residents. Geriatric fellowships
are required for any physician wanting to enter the field.
For the past three years, no
physicians have entered the fellowship program at WVU-Charleston. In fact, no
students have enrolled in any of the four geriatric fellowship programs in West
Virginia in the past three years.
"This is not just our local
program, or in West Virginia," says Goldberg. "This is a national
problem."
The United States has 130
geriatric fellowship programs, with 383 positions. In 2016, only 192 of them
were filled. With that kind of competition, Goldberg laments, why would a
resident apply to a West Virginia School, when they could get into a program
like Yale or Harvard?
Adding to the problem, the average
medical student graduates with $183,000 in debt, and every year of added
education pushes that debt higher.
Dr. Shirley
Neitch, head of the geriatrics department at Marshall University Medical School in
Huntington, W.Va., says students express interest in geriatrics almost every
year. But, "they fear their debt," she says, "and they think
that they need to get into something without the fellowship year where they can
start getting paid for their work."
This trend troubles many people,
including Todd Plumley, whose mother Gladys has dementia, and lives in West
Virginia.
"It's kind of scary that
[older patients] don't have the care that they really need to help them through
these times, and help them prolong their life and give them a better
life," Plumley says.
There are no geriatricians in the
family's hometown of Hamlin,
so Plumley drives his mother almost 45 minutes to another town, Huntington, to
see one. He says seeing this specialist has helped stabilize his mother's
symptoms.
"Right now, if we didn't have
the knowledge and resource," he says, "I believe my mother would have
progressed a lot further along, quicker."
Plumley is in his 50s. He worries
that if he needs the care of a geriatrician as he gets older, driving even 45
minutes may not be an option.
This story is part of NPR's
reporting partnership with West Virginia Public Broadcasting and Kaiser Health News.
http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/07/03/481767273/few-young-doctors-are-training-to-care-for-u-s-elderly
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