> Most residents generate less revenue than they cost to train.
Is this just a thresholding issue? What substantially changes about the resident from year 1 to 3? Can you chop residency up into different tiers where they don't need somebody watching them do stitches once they're no longer the lowest tier?
I find it extremely suspicious that a sector with so much money in it can't figure out how to make apprenticeships profitable but an electrician can.
You seem to be confusing amount of money with actual control. Electrical contractors can charge any price they want (subject to customer demand). Hospitals, especially teaching hospitals, have no such freedom. Medicare reimbursement rates are fixed by government fiat. This is not a free market.
Residencies are already chopped up into tiers. Those with more experience have more clinical and administrative autonomy. But for the most part, Medicare doesn't allow hospitals to directly bill for work done by residents. With a few limited exceptions, all of their work has to be supervised and signed off by a qualified attending physician. This training and supervision is extremely expensive.
Any major reforms will have to come at the federal government policy level. This is not a problem that medical schools and teaching hospitals can solve by themselves.
I think it is primarily a matter of insurance expectations and regulation of residents. It dictates what services they can bill for and the amount of redundant oversight required.
It is a self imposed problem.
The problem is largely imposed by Congress in terms of strict rules about what hospitals are allowed to bill Medicare for. This is not something that teaching hospitals have imposed on themselves.
correct, I didn't mean to imply it was by the hospitals, although the teaching hospitals may still benefit from the current arrangement.