If a new law is passed, it could increase the number of doctors in the Bronx and at the same time, federal lawmakers say, aid President Obama’s plan for universal health care.
On May 8, U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer and Congressman Joseph Crowley were at the Children’s Hospital at Montefiore Medical Center to unveil the Resident Physician Shortage Reduction Act of 2009. If passed, the Act would provide hospitals with millions in new federal funding to train medical residents. The new legislation would increase the number of residents by 15 percent.
Traditionally. the federal government pays for medical residencies, which is the final step in a doctor’s training. But in 1997, federal law capped the number of Medicare-supported residents for hospitals.
“You can’t put an artificial cap on the number of residents the city trains,” Schumer said. “There is a need for medical residents that is more acute than ever before.”
“[The new legislation] is so exciting,” said Cathy Skae, director of Montefiore’s pediatric residency program, which accepts 23 residents a year. “The clients have increased but we haven’t been able to expand the number of doctors.”

