Banner - Practice Academy Virtual Conference, June 11, 2026
News|Videos|March 29, 2026

Why are there suddenly more non-clinical applicants?

Author(s)Todd Shryock
Fact checked by: Chris Mazzolini

Are your hiring practices helping or hindering your recruiting efforts?

Health care organizations face critical physician shortages that have intensified since the pandemic. Burnout has accelerated retirements and career exits among practicing doctors, while demand continues rising with an aging population requiring more complex care. The shortfall spans specialties—from primary care and psychiatry to anesthesiology and emergency medicine—with rural and underserved areas hit hardest.

Recruiting challenges are compounded by competitive pressures. Physicians can command higher compensation, while reimbursement rates continue to fall. Geographic preferences also limit candidate pools, particularly for less desirable locations.

The pipeline problem starts with training capacity. Medical school enrollment has grown modestly, but residency positions—funded largely by Medicare—haven't expanded proportionally. Specialized fields face particularly acute shortages, with fellowship training bottlenecks limiting supply in high-demand areas like oncology and cardiology.

Administrative burdens worsen retention. Physicians spend increasing time on electronic health records, prior authorizations, and documentation requirements rather than patient care, contributing to dissatisfaction. Many report feeling like data entry clerks rather than healers.

Health care employers are testing solutions—loan forgiveness programs, improved work-life balance models, scribe support, and expanded advanced practice provider teams—but the fundamental gap between physician supply and patient demand continues widening, affecting access and care quality nationwide.

Medical Economics spoke with Trent Cotton, head of talent insights at ICIMS, about current hiring challenges in health care and why there are more non-clinical applicants recently.