Kiera Berger has a major in genetics and cell biology, a solid GPA and a score on the Medical College Admission Test that's about average for science undergraduates.
She applied to 10 medical schools, and every one turned her down.
The University of Minnesota student had discovered a cold reality that's striking many hopeful seniors this commencement season: The number of medical school applicants is increasing much faster than the number of openings, and being average isn't good enough anymore.
Last year, more than 43,000 students applied to the nation's medical schools. Only 42 percent of them got in — the lowest acceptance rate in more than a decade. The number of graduates — 18,200 last year — has risen over the last 10 years, but only modestly.
That bottleneck worries many health care analysts, who foresee a shortage of doctors over the next decade as the population ages and the Affordable Care Act increases the number of Americans with health insurance. By one estimate, the nation will be short 90,000 physicians in the next decade. In Minnesota, the estimate is 2,000.
But many programs, including the University of Minnesota Medical School, are at capacity. The class size on the U's Twin Cities campus expanded from 165 to 170 after the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) called for an increase in admissions a few years ago. But vice dean for education Dr. Mark Rosenberg said it can't grow any more without adding residencies, the training programs where students get practical experience.
In order to practice medicine in the United States, students must complete a residency after they finish medical school. Medicare is the largest source of funding for residencies, but a cap on federal funding has created a residency squeeze at hundreds of hospitals.
"Even if we train more, unless we increase the number of residency positions, it's not going to do us any good," Rosenberg said.