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UH Medical School Adjusts to Meet Hawai‘i’s Doctor Shortage

Dr.Farouk / Flickr
Dr.Farouk / Flickr

Hawai‘i is still experiencing a shortage of doctors… but help may be on the way.  A survey conducted by the John A. Burns School of Medicine says just under 3,000 doctors are licensed to treat patients in Hawai‘i. 

Last year yielded some good news, the state lost 45 doctors to retirement, but gained 97 new doctors…a huge jump from just four new recruits the year before.

O‘ahu had the biggest deficit… with about 500 doctors needed.  But the impact is more severe on the neighbor islands where the workforce is straining to meet the growing population and many specialized positions remain unfilled.

Dr. Kelley Withy is the Director of the JABSOM Area Health Education Center.  

Withy says the school is attempting to address the problem with larger class sizes…. and more outreach to attract prospective health workers.  She adds that when doctors train and do their residency in Hawai‘i, they have a much higher chance of staying in the islands. 

The John A. Burns School of Medicine posts information about health care, and becoming a physician on their website

Nick Yee’s passion for music developed at an early age, as he collected jazz and rock records pulled from dusty locations while growing up in both Southern California and Honolulu. In college he started DJing around Honolulu, playing Jazz and Bossa Nova sets at various lounges and clubs under the name dj mr.nick. He started to incorporate Downtempo, House and Breaks into his sets as his popularity grew, eventually getting DJ residences at different Chinatown locations. To this day, he is a fixture in the Honolulu underground club scene, where his live sets are famous for being able to link musical and cultural boundaries, starting mellow and building the audience into a frenzy while steering free of mainstream clichés.
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