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The Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education (THCGME) Program: Increased Funding and Policy Changes in BBA2018

Changes from June 29, 2017 to October 13, 2017

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Teaching health centers (THCs) are outpatient facilities that receive federal funds directly to train medical and dental residents. These facilities are operated by federal health centers, rural health clinics, and tribal health programs, among others. THCs typically provide care to low-income and otherwise underserved populations and are generally located in federally designated health professional shortage areas (HPSAs). The federal government created the teaching health center graduate medical education program (THCGME) in 2010 to pay THCs for the expenses they incur when training residents.

However, most residents receive the bulk of their training in teaching hospitals, not THCs. Such training is generally supported in the form of graduate medical education (GME) payments that are made by a number of government programs directly to hospitals based, with some limits, on the number of residents the hospital trains. Medicare is the largest source of GME support; it paid an estimated $11 billion in FY2013.

A number of expert groups have criticized the hospital-focused nature of residency training, potentially favoring increased emphasis on THCs. Some have argued that health care is shifting to nonhospital settings and that hospital-focused training may not adequately prepare residents to provide outpatient care. Residencies in THCs may ready physicians for such a shift in health care. In addition, THCs may also train the types of residents that experts identify as most needed. Expert groups have found primary care shortages and particularly recommend increasing primary care training in underserved areas (often home to THCs). Past research has shown that medical residents are more likely to practice in areas near their residency training sites. Thus, some experts suggest that training residents at facilities within HPSAs—including THCs—could be a way to alleviate geographic shortages.

Legislative History and Funding

THCGME was created by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA, P.L. 111-148), and the first class of residents began their three-year training programs in 2011. The ACA provided a direct appropriation of $230 million for FY2011 through FY2015. It did not specify an annual breakdown. THCGME is administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). From 2011 through 2015, the number of THCGME training programs increased, as did the number of residents trained (see Table 1). The program supports residencies at THCs in 24 states.

THCGME's funding was extended for FY2016 and FY2017 in the Medicare and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA, P.L. 114-10), which provided $60 million for each year. (The FY2017 amount was reduced to $55.9 million by the sequester.) With MACRA funds, HRSA continued its support of existing training programs but did not expand the program to new THCs.

The Disaster Tax Relief and Airport and Airway Extension Act of 2017 (P.L. 115-63) provided $15 million for the first quarter of FY2018.

Table 1. Teaching Health Center Residents and Program Funding

Academic Year

Number of Residents (Full-Time Equivalents) Funded

Total Number of Residents Trained

Number of Residency Programs Funded

Funding Source

2011-2012

63

N/A

11

ACAa

2012-2013

143

158

22

ACAa

2013-2014

327

361

44

ACAa

2014-2015

556

600

60

ACAa

2015-2016

660

758

60

MACRAb

2016-2017

N/A

N/A

59c

MACRAb

2017-2018 (proposed)

800c

N/A

59c

$60 million new proposed mandatory funding

P.L. 115-63d

Source: CRS Analysis of Budget Documents from the Health Resources and Services Administration.

Notes: Academic years=July 1-June 30; for example, the 2017-2018 academic year begins onbegan July 1, 2017. N/A=not available.

a. ACA provided $230 million for FY2011-FY2015.

b. MACRA provided $60 million for each of FY2016-FY2017. The FY2017 amount was reduced to $55.9 million.

c. Number anticipated in the FY2018 HRSA Budget Justification.

d. P.L. 115-63 provided $15 million for the first quarter of FY2018. The President's budget proposed $60 million for each of FY2018-FY2019.

Costs Per Resident

When the THCGME began, there was uncertainty about the appropriate per-resident amount under the program. Such costs may differ from those for hospital-based training programs, because there may be higher training costs in small programs and in outpatient settings. HRSA initially estimated that it would pay $150,000 per resident. For context (within the hospital setting), Medicare estimates it paid $137,000 per resident in FY2013, and the Department of Veterans Affairs estimates it paid $146,000 per resident in FY2015. Recent research found that THCs spend between $145,000 per resident and $169,000 per resident. Some of this variation is because it is more expensivemay cost more to start a new program than it is to add residents to an existing program. HRSA estimates that the overall per-resident cost for THCs is $157,602. Under MACRA, HRSA reduced its per-resident amount to $95,000 per resident so it could maintain the number of residents the program had supported under the ACA. HRSA was subsequently able to increase this amount for FY2017. No funding is currently expected for FY2018; as such, residents have been accepted to begin training in 2017, Funding included in P.L. 115-63 for the beginning of FY2018 may enable existing programs to recruit residents, but uncertainty remains about subsequent funding. about recruitment efforts for future residents.

Outcomes Associated with Teaching Health Centers

Outcomes research associated with training in THCs is preliminary, as the first class completed training in 2014. Initial findings suggest that the program is meeting its stated goals. Specifically, more than 90% of the program's recent graduates are practicing primary care, and 76% are doing so in a HPSA. Despite these reports, THCs are concerned about sustaining their programs because of the uncertainty of future federal funding.

Policy Considerations

Congress may face a number of policy questions with regard to THCGME, including the following:

  • Should the program's funding be extended?
  • If funding is not extended, what, if any payments should be provided to fund current residents who are completing their training at a THCTHCs?
  • If program funding is extended, is the program's current size appropriate?
  • If funding is extended, is the program's current per-resident funding level appropriate?
  • Is the current funding time frame appropriate? THC training is a minimum of three years and requires a recruitment year prior to training. The most recent extension in MACRA was for two years,; the same duration was also proposed in the Administration's the same extension time the Administration proposed in its FY2018 budget. Congress may consider a longer time frame because of the multiyear nature of GME.
  • What is the role of THCGME in the context of the federal government's full investment in GME? Is this program coordinated with other investments?