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April 14, 2026
Issue Brief
Lori Rodefeld
Emily M. Hawes
Raquel Davis
Shelby Rimmler-Cohen
Heidi B. Miller
Mary Alice Scott
Mukesh Adhikari
Erin Fraher
Publication
Feb 12, 2026
Oct 7, 2025
Sep 2, 2025
Policy Points:
States across the nation are facing physician workforce shortages, particularly in rural and underserved communities. To address these shortages, states are increasingly embracing a “grow your own” graduate medical education (GME) strategy as federal policies fall short of meeting their needs. However, without a guiding framework, states often rely on ad hoc approaches to engage key stakeholders; fund GME development, expansion, and sustainability; and assess the impact of their investments. To address the challenges states face, we developed the Roadmap for Building and Implementing a Comprehensive State GME Strategy, an evidence-based framework that organizes a GME growth strategy into five iterative stages: exploration, strategy development, strategy design, technical assistance, and optimization. The roadmap draws on previous research, the experience of our GME technical assistance centers, and collaborative work with numerous states engaged in developing statewide strategies.
Physician workforce shortages are limiting access to health care in nearly every state, with underserved and rural areas facing the greatest shortfalls.1 To become board certified and licensed to practice, a physician must complete residency training after medical school. Research demonstrates that physicians are likely to practice near where they train, and this evidence has encouraged states to adopt a “grow your own” strategy to expand residency training, also known as graduate medical education (GME), with the intention of retaining physicians in-state after residency.2–4 However, the GME system in the United States is large and complicated, and the overwhelming majority of GME funds are from the federal government. Federal investments total more than $28 billion annually and are primarily funded through Medicare, with substantial contributions from Medicaid, the Veterans Administration, the Department of Defense, and the Health Services and Resources Administration.5 The GME system involves multiple stakeholders, funders, and regulators who oversee accreditation, training requirements, and financing.6
Addressing physician workforce shortages requires more than funding; it demands a coordinated, statewide approach that avoids siloed efforts and ensures long-term impact. Thus, states play a key role in shaping GME, not only as funders but as workforce planners and conveners. Through grants to develop new residency programs, expand or sustain existing programs, and provide technical assistance, states can target training to address physician workforce gaps and address population health needs. Yet, the complexity of GME financing and regulation can leave states without a clear roadmap for action. Questions about how to sequence activities, engage stakeholders, secure funding, and measure impact can stall progress. Moreover, current financing models can create a workforce misaligned with community needs. This misalignment underscores the importance of state-focused, comprehensive workforce planning that integrates GME growth strategies with broader efforts to address specialty-specific shortages, ameliorate geographic disparities, and meet projected physician demand.
To provide states with a clear path to grow their GME capacity, we developed the Roadmap for Building and Implementing a Comprehensive State GME Strategy. Figure 1 outlines the five stages: exploration, strategy development, strategy design, technical assistance, and optimization. The roadmap draws on lessons learned from previous research, our work with multiple states engaged in expanding GME training, and expertise gleaned from leading national technical assistance centers that have supported the launch of new residency training programs nationwide.7–19
Previous work described a national roadmap for developing rural residency GME,15 and while the national roadmap has some overlap with the framework presented in this article, the Roadmap for Building and Implementing a Comprehensive State GME Strategy is specifically geared toward states. It was developed to help states address the challenges they are likely to encounter in developing GME capacity that meets their unique needs, leverages Medicaid and state appropriations, engages state policymakers and health systems, and measures outcomes specific to the populations, geographies, and settings for which they are seeking to increase access. The roadmap is designed to be nonlinear so that states can tailor their GME development process to their specific needs and context. Strategy development is iterative as states may progress quickly through some stages, encounter unforeseen challenges, or need to revisit work completed at an earlier stage based on outcomes or stakeholder feedback. Ownership of a statewide GME strategy varies by state and may reside within a state agency, workforce organization, or academic institution; regardless of the lead entity, success depends on establishing a governance structure that brings together policymakers, health systems, advocates, and other stakeholders to ensure broad feedback and buy-in.
In the initial stage, stakeholders assess the state’s physician workforce needs and take inventory of overall capacity for residency training. A workforce assessment provides baseline data on the existing supply and distribution of physicians in high-need specialties compared with the location and type of GME training that is underway and the retention of GME graduates in the state and in needed specialties and geographies. Typically, statewide workforce assessments are led by state agencies including departments of health or higher education, sometimes in partnership with workforce organizations or academic institutions, ensuring that data collection and analysis reflect statewide priorities. This collective approach ensures that the planning reflects a comprehensive view of GME and physician distribution across the state. For example, during a statewide assessment, the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services determined that primary care and psychiatry positions were in high demand and, thus, decided to focus initial expansion on these specialties.20 The North Carolina GME Technical Assistance Center created maps highlighting training site distribution relative to physician supply that were used to inform workforce planning efforts at the county level.21 The workforce assessment also includes a GME inventory that identifies “GME-naïve” hospitals (hospitals that have not received Medicare funding), residency programs that may be poised for expansion but have not yet grown due to a lack of funding or other barriers, and rural hospitals or health centers looking to become engaged in training. This first stage should also include an assessment of available funding through federal grants, state appropriations, and Medicaid GME.
Key Actions in Stage 1: Exploration
Stage 2 moves from assessing existing workforce supply and GME capacity to analyzing opportunities for growth. Engaging stakeholders to review the information gathered in Stage 1 provides a chance to validate workforce needs, prioritize workforce investments, and align activities with state-specific policy agendas. While primary care shortages often drive initial priorities, states may want to address other high-need specialties such as obstetrics and gynecology or general surgery, ensuring strategies reflect the full spectrum of workforce needs.
Establishing a governance structure creates a foundation for collaboration and stakeholder engagement.18 Stakeholders should include key decision makers and organizations that can influence the physician workforce. States differ in who leads GME strategy development; responsibility may fall to a state agency, a workforce organization, or an academic institution. Regardless of the lead entity, success hinges on collaborative governance that brings together stakeholders to align priorities and resources. While not an exhaustive list, a governance body should include GME leaders, hospitals and health centers, medical schools, physician specialty associations, hospital association representatives, state agencies, and public health officials. Early integration of funding strategy into governance discussions is essential, as stakeholder collaboration can inform resource allocation and legislative priorities. For example, Missouri’s GME Advisory Committee, launched in 2025, brought together varied perspectives to create a comprehensive, collaborative strategy in support of workforce goals.20 Due to limited GME expertise within state agencies, Missouri supplemented internal resources with external technical assistance from an entity experienced in statewide strategy development. States seeking similar support can also leverage partnerships with workforce researchers, medical schools, hospital or health center associations, and national organizations such as the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Key Actions in Stage 2: Strategy Development
Stage 3 translates the GME strategy into a comprehensive and practical plan that establishes the structures and priorities needed for growth. At this stage, states establish funding allocations based on the priorities identified in Stage 2. These may include grants for program start-up, slot expansion, or other targeted initiatives like sustainability, curriculum development, rural rotations, or technical assistance. Table 1 summarizes the funding and technical assistance approaches different states are utilizing and denotes if the state is targeting certain specialties, rural locations, and/or health center settings.18,24–26 Developing a budget and selecting a technical assistance center in this stage also provides the foundation for successful strategy implementation.
Implementation approaches vary by state. Most rely on a combination of legislation, regulatory measures, and budgetary appropriations rather than legislation alone, which does not guarantee funding or sustainability. Robust data and outcomes tracking measures should be established at the beginning, providing for both accountability and sustainability. States should establish clear priorities from the outset. For example, Wisconsin’s expansion grant program requires the state’s funded GME expansion programs to prioritize recruitment of in-state medical students and post-residency in-state retention of 50% for funded positions.27
Key Actions in Stage 3: Strategy Design
Table 1. State GME Models and Technical Assistance Initiatives
A growing number of states (e.g., Wisconsin, New Mexico, Arizona, Missouri and North Carolina) are offering or requiring technical assistance for GME programs, via internal and/or contracted GME expertise.21,28–30 Table 1 lists the technical assistance entities and services each state has developed. Technical assistance is a critical component of a GME growth strategy, ensuring programs can launch, expand, and remain sustainable over the long term. The technical assistance center should serve as a neutral, statewide resource that supports all partners, helping new programs launch, guiding expansion efforts, and providing stability for programs facing challenges. Just as technical assistance ensures programs have the tools to succeed, accountability measures ensure those efforts deliver desired outcomes. Services provided should encompass structured support for program start-up, targeted expansion, and service development for new and expanding programs. A key element of technical assistance is comprehensive data collection to monitor effectiveness. States should also prioritize sustainability by engaging with programs at risk of closure and offering support and resources to prevent loss of training capacity. Effective strategies recognize that GME growth requires more than funding; it also requires support structures that help programs thrive and maintain capacity over time. Wisconsin’s experience illustrates this: Technical assistance was central to the formation of the Wisconsin Collaborative for Rural GME, created when the state embarked on rural training development after five rural residency tracks closed in the early 2000s.31
Key Actions in Stage 4: Technical Assistance
Building on program implementation and support, this stage focuses on long-term monitoring, evaluation, and refinement to ensure the strategy remains responsive to evolving workforce needs. States should disseminate outcomes of GME expansion and sustainability efforts to policymakers, health care leaders, and the public to demonstrate value and inform future investments. This involves ongoing assessment of program support and technical assistance, refining data tracking systems to capture outcomes, and assessing workforce distribution impact. Outcomes tracking has been identified as a priority, as it informs future funding needs and can foster policy changes.18 For example, the Texas legislature aimed to increase GME positions to 10% more than the number of medical school graduates training in their state. From 2014 to 2023 the state created 508 new first-year residency positions, exceeding the goal of 481.32
Key Actions in Stage 5: Optimization
States are increasingly examining ways to increase GME capacity as a “grow your own” strategy to address physician workforce shortages. While Medicare has historically been the primary source of GME funding, Medicare funding challenges include hospital caps on resident positions and limitations on states’ ability to use funding to address physician workforce gaps.7,33,34 By contrast, Medicaid GME and state appropriations help further address state-specific needs.18,35 Federal initiatives such as the Rural Health Transformation Program are also spurring states to develop and implement state workforce development activities tailored to their populations.
Many state GME expansion efforts emerge from individual health systems or specialties rather than strategic GME planning activities that prioritize measurable GME outcomes focused on population health needs. Successful implementation depends on building broad support and commitment, which can be achieved with clear workforce data, trends, and compelling narratives that highlight the impact of gaps in the physician workforce. For example, Montana quadrupled its in-state resident training over the course of five years.3 Both Indiana and Wisconsin also expanded resident positions, with Indiana creating nine medical residencies in the span of 10 years and Wisconsin adding 141 positions over 10 years.36–38
The Roadmap for Building and Implementing a Comprehensive State GME Strategy addresses an existing gap in state-level workforce planning: the absence of a structured model to guide comprehensive GME strategy development and implementation. Historically, states have relied on ad hoc approaches and funding initiatives, which often lack coordination and sustainability. Without a clear framework, states struggle to develop effective strategies, engage key stakeholders, and align investments with workforce priorities. The roadmap provided in this article demonstrates a sequenced and flexible model for growing residency training.
The roadmap also aligns with efforts to broaden workforce development, leveraging lessons learned from a statewide GME strategy to extend beyond physicians. Wisconsin’s experience illustrates this potential: After successfully implementing GME program development grants, the state expanded its approach to include other health professions, creating a comprehensive training grant model.39 To date, the state has awarded 55 grants, which include 32 training sites supporting the education of 900 learners with a 50% retention rate of participating sites. This example demonstrates how a structured framework can catalyze scalable solutions across disciplines. More detail on these state case examples will be included in a forthcoming publication.
Momentum for state-based policies to promote physician workforce expansion is building, driven by limited federal resources, the physician workforce shortage crisis, and growing examples of successful state-level approaches to expand in-state training of physicians. The Roadmap for Building and Implementing a Comprehensive State GME Strategy provides a foundation for states to implement GME solutions that can be refined and improved over time. The framework provides structure while allowing states to tailor strategies to meet unique workforce needs. By collaborating with stakeholders, states can customize their approach to address challenges and opportunities. This adaptability ensures the framework will remain effective for developing physician workforce solutions. Look out for soon-to-be-published companion illustrative case studies with insights into how states have designed and financed GME to complement federal efforts to expand workforce training capacity.
The roadmap builds upon previous research and the authors’ experience in the development and administration of state GME strategies in Wisconsin, New Mexico, Missouri, and North Carolina.7–19 It was developed utilizing an iterative consensus process with six content experts who hold leadership roles in state-level GME development and workforce research. Their expertise includes comprehensive strategy development in five states and support for policy development across a diverse mix of states nationwide.
Roadmap development included identification of multiple objectives within each of the five stages of developing a comprehensive state-level GME strategy: exploration, strategy development, strategy design, technical assistance, and optimization. The stages and their objectives were designed to be nonlinear such that states can tailor their development process to address their most pressing needs, to account for resources available to develop and implement such a strategy, and to iterate and expand on those efforts in the future.
Table 1 provides an overview of current GME development, expansion, sustainability, and technical assistance initiatives across all 50 US states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. Supported medical specialties and inclusion of rural and/or health center provisions among the currently available initiatives are indicated for each state and territory. Depending on the state entity, provisions may be defined in formal, codified legislation or in less formal grant-application language. The findings in Table 1 were produced using mixed-methods data collection and analysis. The team conducted document analysis using online sources such as state initiative websites, requests for proposals, Medicaid State Plan Amendments (SPAs), and state legislation from program inception years as well as recent years (i.e., 2017–2025). Informational interviews were also conducted with GME leaders involved in statewide GME initiatives to gain further insight into programmatic approaches, data management strategies, and outcomes tracking. This combined quantitative and qualitative data allowed for the comparison of state frameworks and key characteristics of these frameworks.
Acknowledgments: We gratefully acknowledge the contributions of the following collaborators through the Sheps GME Technical Assistance Centers at the UNC Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research: Julie Chin, MEITE, education technology specialist, for contributions to the creation of the roadmap figure; Khadeejatul-Kubraa Lawal, MPH, former graduate research assistant, for contributions to protocol design and data collection for both the subject matter expert interviews and document content analysis; Jacob Rains, MPH, research affiliate, for contributions to the state GME study design and analysis; and Emma Bazemore, BS, research affiliate, for contributions to the development of Table 1.
Funding Statement: The Rural Residency and Planning and Development Program–Technical Assistance Center RRPD-TAC, the Teaching Health Center Planning and Development Program–Technical Assistance Center (THCPD-TAC), and the Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education Program–Technical Assistance Center (THCGME-TAC) are supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under cooperative agreements #UK6RH32513 and #U3LHP45321, and contract #75R60224C00016, respectively. The contents are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement, by HRSA, HHS, or the US Government.
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