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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTennessee Sees OB Residency Applications Drop, Future Risk
https://nashvillebanner.com/2024/12/17/tn-obstetric-residency-applications-drop/In the 2023-2024 school year, Tennessee saw a 21 percent drop in obstetric residency applications, according to a study by the Association of American Medical Schools. The annual analysis shows residents continue to shy away from training in states with strict abortion bans.
Not only is abortion illegal in Tennessee, but roughly half of the states rural hospitals dont even provide obstetric services, and a 2023 report from the March of Dimes showed about one-third of Tennessee counties have been deemed maternity care deserts, meaning they have limited or zero maternal health care access.
According to Kaiser and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Tennessee has one of highest rates of maternal mortality and infant mortality in the country.
With all of this as the backdrop, the decline in obstetric residencies has left many medical professionals in the state feeling alarmed about the future of reproductive health care. The Banner reached out to eight practicing OB-GYNs for this story from various hospitals in the Nashville area, and half were either not comfortable or unable to speak on the record for fear of losing their jobs.
Not only is abortion illegal in Tennessee, but roughly half of the states rural hospitals dont even provide obstetric services, and a 2023 report from the March of Dimes showed about one-third of Tennessee counties have been deemed maternity care deserts, meaning they have limited or zero maternal health care access.
According to Kaiser and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Tennessee has one of highest rates of maternal mortality and infant mortality in the country.
With all of this as the backdrop, the decline in obstetric residencies has left many medical professionals in the state feeling alarmed about the future of reproductive health care. The Banner reached out to eight practicing OB-GYNs for this story from various hospitals in the Nashville area, and half were either not comfortable or unable to speak on the record for fear of losing their jobs.
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Tennessee Sees OB Residency Applications Drop, Future Risk (Original Post)
In It to Win It
Dec 17
OP
OrlandoDem2
(2,330 posts)1. They are screwed as a state. We are screwed as a nation.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,848 posts)2. Red states!
The legislators, probably none of whom went to medical school, and likely did not take another science class after high school biology/chemistry, in their infinite and delusional wisdom, make life-destroying laws.
Were I in charge, none of them would get any kind of prostate treatment, especially if they get cancer there.
Meanwhile, the good women of the great state of Tennessee will suffer. As will their babies.
Lars39
(26,263 posts)4. I'm telling ya, if these men start getting denied TURPS and sepsis treatments
for prostate infections they might just start to understand.
Freddie
(9,744 posts)3. Pregnancy and birth "vacations"
Will start happening among the well-to-do (of course). She will pay $$$ to endure her pregnancy and give birth in a state that observes medical standards of care.
hatrack
(61,206 posts)5. Jesus Take The Speculum!!!!
You get what you vote for. Congratulations, Tennessee - you volunteered for this.