Indo-Asian News Service
July 25, 2003
For an Indian American appointed to a top US medical body, making foreign
trained doctors equal in status and achievement to their American counterparts
is a priority.
S "Jay" Jayasankar was last month made head of the International
Medical Graduates (IMG) section of the powerful American Medical Association
(AMA), vowing to break the glass ceiling for IMGs.
"Indian physicians are generally well liked by patients,"
Jayasankar said in an interview. "Yet there is not a general recognition
that we are equal to local graduates and there are many glass ceilings.
"We need more IMGs in leadership to really change this." Jayasankar
estimates there are some 200,000 IMGs around the US.
He notes the work done by the American Association of Physicians of Indian
Origin (AAPI) in winning several battles, including the creation of the IMG
section.
"The AAPI was created for IMG advocacy. AAPI leaders have been active in
IMG issues at the state and AMA level."
"IMGs are nearly a quarter of all physicians in the US and one in five
IMGs is from India. That gives the AMA - IMG section and the AAPI a lot of
clout, which I will use to level the playing field and get the recognition and
respect we IMGs deserve.
"IMGs have to jump through many hoops to start training in the US There
is a reason. The public has to be protected and assured that IMGs meet the same
standards as USMGs (medical graduates in the US).
"The real problem is that after they have proved themselves equal, they
are asked to jump through ever higher and tighter hoops over and over again for
licence or if they move out of state. We shall not tolerate that. We must get
parity," Jayasankar asserted.
And currently, the AMA works on the assessment that there is an oversupply of
physicians, whereas, says Jayasankar, "the new policy is expected to
reflect the reality of current or imminent shortages."
Jayasankar says they have already been successful in getting the leadership
at the ECFMG (Educational Council for Foreign Medical Graduates) and the FSMB
(Federation of State Medical Boards) to work with each other to avoid redundancy
in credentialing and primary source verification.
One of IMG's recent achievements, according to Jaysankar, is the very
establishment of IMG last year as a permanent part of the AMA.
"And the AMA has created policy for the first time supporting J1 Visa
waiver; The physician workforce policy review is the result of our section's
request; and the AMA-IMG Section and the state of Wisconsin were the ones who
started, over a year and a half ago, the current tort reform advocacy initiative
of the AMA."
Currently, the AMA has only 40,000 members, Jayasankar points out. The IMG's
existence would mean many more physicians joining the premier physicians' body.
His priorities include centralised credentialing and avoiding duplication of
Primary Source Verification for licensure; parity with US medical graduates for
primary licensure and for reciprocity; re-evaluating the US physician workforce,
parity with American graduates when taking the Clinical Skills Assessment Exam;
dealing with immigration issues in the wake of 9/11; and working with the AMA
board of trustees to develop leadership opportunities in organised medicine for
foreign graduates.
Jayasankar, an orthopaedic surgeon from Massachusetts General Hospital and
Harvard University, is a delegate from the Massachusetts Medical Society to the
AMA's policymaking body, the House of Delegates.