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Funding and incentives for resident education in an era of radiologist shortages, increasing workload, and financial constraints

Flynn, Elaine
Tai, Ryan
Watts V, George J
Rosen, Max P
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UMass Chan Affiliations
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Journal Article
Publication Date
2025-10-02
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Abstract

Training the next generation of radiologists is essential given the ongoing national radiologist shortage. However, funding residency positions and incentivizing high-quality resident education remains a challenge. Increasing demand for imaging leading to increased radiologist workloads and moonlighting, the rise of remote work, and the use of productivity measures that value clinical work over time spent on resident education may create barriers to high-quality resident education. This paper outlines graduate medical education (GME) funding sources, the direct and indirect costs of training radiology residents, resident contributions to their departments, and the support needed to facilitate academic faculty to deliver high-quality resident education. Incorporating teaching activities into productivity measures, offering a clinician-educator path to promotion, supporting professional development, and recognizing excellence in teaching can help incentivize a focus on resident education. Additionally, diversifying clinical work with educational activities and appropriately compensating faculty may help increase faculty's enthusiasm for resident education, promote job satisfaction, and improve morale.

Source

Flynn E, Tai R, Watts V GJ, Rosen MP. Funding and incentives for resident education in an era of radiologist shortages, increasing workload, and financial constraints. J Am Coll Radiol. 2025 Oct 2:S1546-1440(25)00569-1. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2025.09.023. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 41046050.

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DOI
10.1016/j.jacr.2025.09.023
PubMed ID
41046050
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Copyright © 2025. Published by Elsevier Inc.
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