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A training program would bring doctors to rural Vermont, if it gets state funding

Two women stand in front of a doctor's office hallway for a portrait.
Lexi Krupp
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¿ªÔÆÌåÓý
Dr. Melissa Volansky and Nicole Marcheterre stand for a portrait at Lamoille Health Partners in Morrisville, where they've been working to develop a training program for family medicine doctors.

When Dr. Melissa Volansky thinks about her colleagues retiring, she gets the sense that no one is coming to take their place.

She works at Lamoille Health Partners in Morrisville, a community health center across the street from Copley Hospital. There’s a view of the mountains outside the front door. Inside, there’s a big rainforest mural in the hallway leading to pediatric exam rooms.

Volansky said it's a great place to work � she's been a family medicine doctor there for 25 years. But recruiting new clinicians is not always easy.

“I’ve been left at the altar a few times by potential candidates,� she said. “Housing has been a problem. I think also opportunity, child care, schools, all of that kind of stuff. It’s also just a question of people getting comfortable where they train.�

More from ¿ªÔÆÌåÓý: A day â€� and a lifetime â€� at an Essex County health clinic with Dr. Bob Primeau

Right now, the only place in Vermont where family medicine doctors can do their training after medical school is at the University of Vermont Medical Center. They graduate six residents a year, and they can’t take any more.

Volansky has been . That’s because wherever doctors do their residency training, they’re , especially in rural areas. Most family medicine residents stay in the same state after they graduate.

A few years ago, she and other health care workers got about $500,000 from the federal government to develop another family medicine residency program in Vermont, based at health centers in smaller communities. Last month, they officially got academic accreditation for a three-year program to train residents at the clinic and hospital in Morrisville and at Gifford Medical Center in Randolph.

A sign along a road reads "Lamoille Health Partners." There's a view of mountains in the background.
Lexi Krupp
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¿ªÔÆÌåÓý
The proposed residency program would bring family medicine doctors to Morrisville and Randolph. Twelve family medicine residents would provide about 8,000 primary care appointments a year.

When the program has a full cohort of 12 residents, it will get $1.9 million a year , along with revenue residents generate from seeing patients � an estimated 8,000 clinic visits a year. But for the first few years, .

“It's going to take some investment on the part of the state to get it started,� Volansky said.

Right now, the program is short about $4 million over the next four years. And community health centers and hospitals where residents would be based have to cover the costs.

A door to Lamoile Health Partners that lists the hours of operation for Family Medicine and pediatrics.
Lexi Krupp
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¿ªÔÆÌåÓý
Residents could start as soon as next year, if the program gets state funding.

"We would very much like to run this program, but the money matters," said Michael Costa, the CEO of Gifford Medical Center, who would also head the new residency program. "You can't lose millions of dollars and then take this on."

Volansky and Costa recently testified to lawmakers . They'll find out if they received the funding when the state budget is finalized.

If we don't invest in this now, then what's going to happen in five to 10 years for these organizations that then don't have doctors?
Nicole Marcheterre, program administrator for Maple Mountain Consortium

“This is really something to invest in," said Nicole Marcheterre, the program administrator. "Because if we don't invest in this now, then what's going to happen in five to 10 years for these organizations that then don't have doctors and can't actually provide services to their patients?�

If the program does get state funding, residents would arrive next summer, in July of 2026.

Then, the long term plan is to expand the program to other parts of the state, at health centers paired with nearby hospitals , , , and surrounding communities.

"We'll prove the concept," Volansky said. "Then I think everybody will want one."

Lexi covers science and health stories for ¿ªÔÆÌåÓý. Email Lexi.

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