Barack Obama ran for office in 2008 promising to invest in rural areas, which face unique health care challenges — including doctor shortages. He promised in his Blueprint for Change to "attract more doctors to rural areas."
And though there's more to do, he's largely followed through, experts say.
"You would have to go back a ways before you'd have another administration that was as favorable for getting folks into rural locations," said Mark Doescher, a physician and researcher at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and former director of the University of Washington's Center for Health Workforce Studies.
The Obama administration significantly boosted support for the National Health Service Corps, which offers scholarships and loan repayment to doctors in exchange for working in underserved areas — including an extra $300 million from the stimulus.
That two-year funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act roughly doubled the number of doctors in the loan repayment program to 4,544, more than 40 percent of whom serve in rural areas, according to a study in the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.
In August 2011, the administration expanded eligibility for the loan repayment program to "critical access hospitals," which have 25 beds or fewer.
Meanwhile, the administration has promoted residency opportunities in rural areas, reallocating residency slots, investing in the Rural Training Track program, and spending $230 million on a five-year initiative to put more primary care residents in community settings, including rural areas.
Once primary care physicians train in rural areas, the goal is to keep them there.
A 10 percent increase in Medicare payment rates for primary care physicians through 2016 was intended to help, though some physicians say the bonuses aren't big enough to have much impact — and need to be made permanent.
These steps aren't enough to solve rural workforce shortages, but they do "attract more doctors to rural areas." We rate this Promise Kept.