RT Journal A1 Schroeder SA T1 How can we tell whether there are too many or too few physicians?: The case for benchmarking JF JAMA JO JAMA YR 1996 FD December 11 VO 276 IS 22 SP 1841 OP 1843 DO 10.1001/jama.1996.03540220065033 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.1996.03540220065033 AB Public policy debates continue to swirl around the topic of physician supply for at least 4 reasons. First, entry into medicine, in contrast to many occupations, is not left to the dynamics of the market. Numerical limits on the number of medical school positions are determined by a voluntary educational establishment entrusted with the responsibility of training physicians. Even in periods when medicine seemed a relatively unattractive field—as in the mid 1980s—there were substantially more applicants than available first-year positions. Furthermore, and in contrast to schools of law or business, the application pool is diminished by the need to overcome significant academic hurdles (such as organic chemistry) required for admission.See also p 1811.Second, medicine differs from most other careers in the extent to which the public subsidizes the educational process. At the medical school level, this occurs mainly at the 77 public institutions that enjoy some line-item support