HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

H.B. NO.

2465

TWENTY-NINTH LEGISLATURE, 2018

 

STATE OF HAWAII

 

 

 

 

 

 

A BILL FOR AN ACT

 

 

relating to medical education.

 

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

 


SECTION 1.  According to a November 2016 report by the University of Hawaii, Hawaii loses on average fifty physicians per year due to retirement.  It is estimated that there will be a shortage of three hundred to seven hundred physicians by 2020.  Within ten years, approximately fifty-two per cent of physicians in the State will be sixty-five years of age or older, which is a common age for retirement.

During the 2016-2017 academic year, the John A. Burns school of medicine enrolled a total of two hundred eighty students.  Of the approximately two thousand three hundred individuals who applied, only seventy--which is the largest class the school can accommodate without adding faculty or expanding facilities--were accepted into the first-year class.

It is imperative that the State attempt to reduce this physician shortfall.  Initiatives such as adding faculty or expanding facilities at the John A. Burns school of medicine are costly.  However, a less expensive alternative exists: financially assisting Hawaii residents to attend medical school in foreign nations in which the costs of education and living are lower than in Hawaii.  Many physicians who currently practice in Hawaii have graduated from foreign medical schools, including those in the Philippines.

The college of medicine at the university of Northern Philippines provides an attractive option for Hawaii students who wish to pursue a medical education, which would help to alleviate the growing shortage of practicing physicians in the State.  The State of Hawaii and the province of Ilocos Sur in the Philippines have a sister state-province relationship that was established in 1985.  Furthermore, the costs of tuition, room and board, and other living expenses in Ilocos Sur are significantly lower than in Hawaii.  In addition, foreign students from many other Asian nations attend the college of medicine at the university of Northern Philippines.

The purpose of this Act is to require the department of health to conduct a study regarding the establishment of a pilot program under which residents of Hawaii may pursue a doctor of medicine degree at the college of medicine at the university of Northern Philippines in Ilocos Sur, Philippines, with State-provided financial support, in exchange for a commitment to practice medicine in Hawaii after they graduate.

SECTION 2.  (a)  The department of health shall conduct a study regarding the establishment of a pilot program under which residents of Hawaii may pursue a doctor of medicine degree at the college of medicine at the university of Northern Philippines in Ilocos Sur, Philippines, with State-provided financial support, in exchange for a commitment to practice medicine in Hawaii after they graduate.

(b)  The study shall consider the following:

          (1)  What qualifications, including those pertaining to legal residence and academic achievement, individuals shall meet to be eligible to participate in the pilot program; provided that eligibility criteria shall be structured to encourage individuals from throughout Hawaii, particularly rural and underserved areas, to apply to and participate in the pilot program;

          (2)  The amount of financial support to be provided by the State to individuals participating in the pilot program and how such amounts shall be determined;

          (3)  The purposes for which the financial support provided in paragraph (2) may be used; provided that tuition, room and board, and transportation shall be allowable expenses;

          (4)  The required length and any other conditions of an individual's commitment to practice medicine in the State after graduation; provided that individuals shall be:

              (A)  Required to complete their medical internships in the United States; and

              (B)  Strongly encouraged to practice medicine in their home communities in Hawaii;

          (5)  The penalties to be imposed on or reimbursement of financial support to be required of, if any, an individual who fails to:

               (A)  Complete the doctor of medicine degree at the college of medicine at the university of Northern Philippines; or

               (B)  Meet the required commitment to practice medicine in Hawaii after graduation;

          (6)  Any visa and other immigration requirements or restrictions imposed by the host nation on individuals participating in the pilot program;

          (7)  An analysis of the educational equivalency and accreditation standards of the college of medicine at the university of Northern Philippines as compared to medical schools in the United States; and

          (8)  Any professional licensing or other requirements applicable to graduates of foreign medical schools that need to be met by individuals participating in the pilot program before they are authorized to practice medicine in the State.

     SECTION 3.  The department of health shall submit a report of its findings and recommendations, including any proposed legislation, to the legislature no later than twenty days before the regular session of 2019.

     SECTION 4.  There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $         or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2018-2019 for the department of health to conduct the study required under section 2 of this Act.

     The sum appropriated shall be expended by the department of health for the purposes of this Act.

     SECTION 5.  This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2018.

 

INTRODUCED BY:

_____________________________



 

Report Title:

Department of Health; Philippine Medical Education; Pilot Program; Study

 

Description:

Requires the Department of Health to conduct a study regarding a pilot program to pay for Hawaii residents to attend the College of Medicine of the University of Northern Philippines in Ilocos Sur in exchange for a commitment to practice medicine in Hawaii after graduation.

 

 

 

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