Slots for Doctors Program
In 2023, the FMA advocated for the creation of the Slots for Doctors Program and secured $30 million to create 300 new residency positions in specialties with statewide supply-and-demand deficits. The program allocates $100,000 annually for residency positions in an initial or established accredited residency program first filled on or after June 1, 2023. The Live Healthy package provides an additional $50 million for the creation of 500 new residency slots.
Notwithstanding the requirement for a slot to be first filled after June 1, 2023, SB 7016 allows for up to 200 slots that existed prior to July 1, 2023, to qualify for the increased funding. Under this provision, the position must be in a statewide supply-and-demand specialty, have gone unfilled for at least three years, be subsequently filled after June 1, 2024, and be in an initial or established accredited training program. Primary care positions will be prioritized if applications under this provision exceed the number of authorized resident positions or the allocated funding.
In addition to the Live Healthy funding, SB 330, sponsored by Sen. Boyd, appropriated an additional
$12 million to Slots for Doctors for up to 10 newly created resident positions within a designated behavioral health teaching hospital. These designated slots will be funded at an annual rate of $150,000.
In a phenomenal win for physicians and the future of medicine, this additional $62 million increases the recurring funding for the Slots for Doctors Program to a total of $92 million for 880 new residency slots.
Reporting Requirements
Accompanying the increased funding for graduate medical education (GME) is an annual reporting requirement for any hospital or qualifying institution that receives state funds under the Statewide Medicaid Residency Program, Graduate Medical Education Startup Bonus Program, or the Slots for Doctors Program. This legislation requires these entities to report specific data sets relating to residency positions and the funding source for each position. Beginning July 1, 2025, hospitals and qualifying institutions will be required to annually submit to AHCA financial records detailing the manner in which state funds allocated to support residency positions were expended.
In addition to the reporting requirements related to funding, each hospital or qualifying institution must provide an exit survey to their exiting residents and submit the results of the survey to AHCA. The survey questions are largely geared toward collecting data on where physicians practice post- residency and what type of employment has been procured.
Graduate Medical Education Committee
With such a strong focus on GME and dedicated funding, SB 7016 creates the Graduate Medical Education Committee. The Committee will be responsible for composing an annual report that must, at a minimum, detail the following:
- The role of residents and medical faculty in the provision of healthcare.
- The relationship of GME to the state’s physician workforce.
- The typical workload for residents and the role such workload plays in retaining physicians in the long-term workforce.
- The costs of training medical residents for hospitals and qualifying institutions.
- The availability and adequacy of all sources of revenue available to support GME.
- The use of state funds, including but not limited to intergovernmental transfers, for GME for each hospital or qualifying institution receiving such funds.
The Committee will be composed of the following members:
- Three medical school deans, or their designees, appointed by the chair of the Council of Florida Medical School Deans;
- Four members appointed by the Governor, one physician representing the FMA or FOMA who has supervised residents, a member of the Florida Hospital Association, a member of the Safety Net Hospital Alliance, and a physician who is practicing at a qualifying institution;
- Two members appointed by the Secretary of AHCA, one who represents a statutory teaching hospital, and a physician who has supervised residents;
- Two members appointed by the state Surgeon General, one who represents a teaching hospital, and a physician who has supervised residents; and
- Two members, one appointed by the President of the Senate and one appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
The Graduate Medical Education Committee will provide valuable information on the health of Florida’s physician workforce.