Long story but bear with me. Last weekend, I was invited to a friend's house for a pre-New Year's party, a guy I've referred to before in this forum that I helped mentor and who immigrated from Peru 15 years ago. I was the only native born guy at the party and met a number of very interesting people, mostly from Peru. One person was an MD, said that he earned his degree in Peru, went to Penn State University, then as part of his work visa, was assigned to complete his residency at a hospital in my hometown here in the Tri Cities. He said that the federal government sends them to underserved parts of the country as a condition of their work permit.
When I told my wife, who is a retired nurse, about the encounter, she mentioned how there were a lot of foreign born doctors in our area, so it piqued my interest and I did some research. What I discovered was astounding:
There are more than 247,000 doctors with medical degrees from foreign countries practicing in the United States, making up slightly more than one-quarter of all doctors. Although the data used in this report does not contain information on country of birth or citizenship, evidence from other sources indicates that most foreign-trained doctors are not U.S. citizens—meaning that the majority are foreign-born. These doctors play a key role in providing healthcare for millions of Americans.
In areas with the highest poverty rates—where more than 30 percent of the population lives below the federal poverty rate—nearly one-third of all doctors are foreign-trained.
Where per-capita income is below $15,000 per year, 42.5 percent of all doctors are foreign-trained. Where 75 percent or more of the population is non-white, 36.2 percent of the doctors are foreign-trained. Where 10 percent or less of the population has a college degree, nearly one-third of all doctors are foreign-trained.
The demand for foreign-trained doctors will only increase as the need for doctors and accessible, affordable healthcare in the United States continues to grow. The Association of American Medical Colleges found that the demand for doctors will continue to outpace supply, leading to a projected shortfall of between 46,100 and 90,400 doctors by 2025, many in primary care. These shortages are compounded by the fact that large numbers of doctors will be retiring in the next few years.
https://www.americanimmigrationcouncil. ... ommunities
I haven't had a chance to fact check this information and if somebody wants to rise to the challenge (too bad Idahawk isn't around anymore), you have my blessing. But there are other articles from other websites that reflect this information. If it's true, then it is more proof of how screwed up Donald Trump's immigration policy is where he's not only going after illegal immigration, but is proposing/making huge cuts in legal immigration and is statements and that his statement that "we're full" is categorically false.