Wednesday, June 18, 2025

The Primary Care Shortfall in the Great Lakes Region

If residents within a geographic area, facility, or population group have poor access to basic medical care because an insufficient number of primary care physicians serve the area relative to its population, that setting can be designated a primary care HPSA (health professional shortage area) by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).  As of March 31, 2025, more than 77.2 million Americans lived in the HRSA-designated primary care shortfall areas.    That number included about 11.4 million residents of the five-state Great Lakes region who were living in HRSA-designated primary care shortfall areas at that time.  According to HRSA estimates, another 1,847 primary care providers would need to be serving Great Lakes region HPSAs in order to eliminate the primary care shortfall in the region.  A further review of HRSA data details the following about the primary care shortfall in the Great Lakes region:


The Primary Care Shortfall in the Great Lakes Region

The Primary Care Shortfall in the Great Lakes Region

State (1) HPSAs (2) Population (3) Shortfall
IL 261 3,081,967 527
IN 153 2,230,213 336
MI 253 2,698,029 490
OH 174 2,011,262 342
WI 165 1,332,145 152
Region 1,006 11,353,616 1,847
U.S. 7,749 77,253,848 13,364

(1) HRSA-designated Geographic Units, Population Groups, and Facilities with a primary care shortfall
(2) Population of designated HPSAs
(3) Primary Care practitioners needed to remove the HPSA Designation

Source:  Designated HPSA Quarterly Summary, 3/31/25 (HRSA)

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