The Triple Double: Doubling Down on Primary Care by State

Focus Area:
Health of US Primary Care Scorecard Primary Care Transformation
Topic:
Health Care Workforce
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Copublished with the Robert Graham Center and the Dr. John W. Hatch Center for Science

Robert Graham Center

The issue

The 2025 US Primary Care Scorecard highlights how systemic disinvestment in U.S. primary care is posing a grave threat to the wellbeing of communities nationwide. The Scorecard, developed by researchers at the Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Primary Care and co-funded by the Milbank Memorial Fund and The Physicians Foundation, found that the United States spends less than 5% of total U.S. health spending on primary care, and that share is declining. It also found that just 20% of new physicians are entering primary care, which is leading to workforce shortages and access problems. Thirty percent of U.S. adults now report going without a usual source of care, and 12% of children lack a regular source of care; these numbers have increased even in a period of expanding insurance coverage.

Policy can make a difference. The Scorecard also identified a bright spot in primary care delivery: There are more primary care physicians per person in areas of higher social disadvantage than in areas of lower social disadvantage. This may reflect the presence of community health centers, which provide high-quality, affordable, comprehensive primary care services to 1 in 10 people annually in the United States. 

The rallying cry 

To reverse the downward trends in primary care investment and workforce, Asaf Bitton, MD, MPH, executive director of Ariadne Labs, has called for a Primary Care “Triple Double.” This feat occurs, rarely, in basketball, when a player hits double digits in at least 3 of 5 categories: points, rebounds, assists, blocks, and steals. In primary care, by 2030, the United States needs to: 

  • Double primary care spending as a share of all spending in all insurance markets (from roughly 5% to 10%) 
  • Double the number of people cared for at community health centers annually (from roughly 10% to 20%) 
  • Double the percentage of new physicians entering primary care primary care (from roughly 20% to 40%) 


The state of the states

The maps, developed by the Robert Graham Center and the Dr. John W. Hatch Center for Science, below show how close each state is to the targets on these three metrics and provides a baseline ranking of state primary care performance. For more primary care data by state, see the 2025 Primary Care Scorecard Dashboard

Target Area 1: Primary Care Spending (for Physicians) — Commercial Insurance 

2022 Performance of States Relative to 2030 Goal (8.78%) 

TripleDouble_PCSpend_NarrowESI


Data Sources: Health Care Costs Institute, 2022. Notes: The primary care narrow definition is restricted to primary care physicians only. No state -level data on other primary care clinicians is available. Primary care specialties included family medicine, general practices, internal medicine, geriatrics, pediatrics, and osteopathy. 

Target Area 1: Primary Care Spending (for Physicians) — Medicare Fee For Service 

2022 Performance of States Relative to 2030 Goal (7.72%) 

Pc Spending Medicare FFS


Data Sources: Medicare fee-for-service claims, 2022. Notes: The primary care narrow definition is restricted to primary care physicians only. No state-level data on other primary care clinicians is available. Primary care specialties included family medicine, general practices, internal medicine, geriatrics, pediatrics, and osteopathy. 


Target Area 1: Primary Care Spending (for Physicians) — Medicaid 2022 Performance of States Relative to 2030 Goal (8.6%) 

2022 Performance of States Relative to 2030 Goal (8.6%) 

Primary care spending Medicaid


Data Sources: Analyses of Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data, 2022. 

Notes: The primary care narrow definition is restricted to primary care physicians only. No state-level data on other primary care clinicians is available. Primary care specialties included family medicine, general practices, internal medicine, geriatrics, pediatrics, and osteopathy.

Target Area 2: Percentage of Population Served by a Community Health Center (CHC) 

2022 Performance of States Relative to 2030 Goal (18.6%) 

Percent of pop served by CHC

Data Sources: Uniform Data System, 2022, US Census Bureau Centennial Census, 2020.

Target Area 3: Percentage of New Physicians Entering Primary Care 

2022 Performance of States Relative to 2030 Goal (43.2%) 

New physicians entering primary care

Data Sources: American Medical Association Masterfile, Accredited Council for Graduate Medical Education data in AMA Masterfile (Historical residency file), Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Medicare Physician and Other Practitioners by Provider and Service PUF files, 2022. Notes: Primary care specialties included family medicine, general practices, internal medicine, geriatrics, and pediatrics. Specialty for doctors of osteopathy (DOs) are not always included in the American Medical Association Masterfile, so these data may be an underestimation of the true workforce. 

For more information, see https://www.milbank.org/primary-care-scorecard/


Overall Ranking for Primary Care Performance on Medicare Spending, New Physician Workforce, CHCs* 

Overall state ranking

*Does not include PC Spend – Medicaid or commercial insurance 

Data Sources: Medicare fee-for-service claims, 2022; American Medical Association Masterfile, Accredited Council for Graduate Medical Education data in AMA Masterfile (Historical residency file), Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Medicare Physician and Other Practitioners by Provider and Service PUF files, 2022; Uniform Data System, 2022. and US Census Bureau Centennial Census, 2020. 

Note on methods: State rank based on summary of ranks for Medicare fee-for-service primary care spending, new physicians entering primary care, and percent of the population served annually by a CHC.