Doctors specializing in care for older adults are increasingly in demand as the country ages — but America's newer physicians aren't that interested in geriatric medicine.
Driving the news: Less than half of 348 post-residency fellowships for geriatric internal medicine filled up in the initial matching process this year, according to new data from the National Resident Matching Program, the nonprofit that oversees placement of physicians in training.
Between the lines: Little exposure to geriatric care during training and poor reimbursement compared to more lucrative specialties may affect young physicians' interest in geriatric medicine, according to NRMP.
Meanwhile, doctors matched into 100% of fellowship spots available in interventional pulmonology, while almost every spot was filled for cardiology, gastroenterology, allergy medicine and hematology-oncology.
By the numbers: About 85% of 9,068 positions across 38 subspecialties were filled through this year's matching process.
What's next: Doctors who didn't match into a fellowship can still apply to open positions, so these numbers may grow.