Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner.
Quick announcement.
I will be doing a live event on Sunday, November 2nd in Washington,
D.C. at Sixth and I, which is a great room if you've never been.
I will be in conversation with Jeff Bennett of PBS NewsHour,
celebrating 20 years of Freakonomics and talking about what's next.
Hope you can make it.
For tickets, go to freakonomics.com slash live shows.
And now here is today's episode.
Have you ever tried to make an appointment with your doctor and been told it would be weeks or even months before you could get in?
Or maybe you were referred to a specialist and it turned out that the nearest specialist isn't at all nearby?
One obvious cause of this problem is good old supply and demand.
We have around a million working physicians in the US or one for every 340 people.
That is a much lower ratio than other high income countries.
I'm telling you, we're 180,000 doctors behind.
It's not going to get us to where we need to be.
There are also mismatches in where physicians work.
Some cities have a surplus while some rural areas have a shortage.
There are also mismatches when it comes to specialties.
Some places have plenty of cardiologists and oncologists and psychiatrists,