Is There a Doctor In The House…or Senate?
A long-term patient known as ‘Conrad’ is about to expire on
September 30, 2015 unless Congress can resuscitate it and provide a permanent
cure.
The ‘Conrad 30’ Program, named after former North Dakota Senator
Kent Conrad - the law’s original sponsor, is a program for foreign physicians
who come to the U.S. with a J-1 visa to complete their medical residency. The J-1 visa permits foreign medical
graduates to receive education and training in a Residency program in the U.S. However, one of the terms of the J-1 visa –
also known as an ‘exchange-visitor’ visa – is that it requires the visa holder
to return to his or her home residence for 2 years before being eligible to
adjust status or change to another type of visa that permits her to practice
medicine in the U.S. In other words, the
newly-trained physician must return home for 2 years before being able to
practice medicine in the U.S… unless….
…the physician is able to get a ‘waiver’ of the 2-year home
residency requirement found in §212(e) of the Immigration & Nationality
Act.
There are several ways in which any J-1 visa holder may
request a ‘waiver’ of the 2-year home residency requirement; among these are ‘subject
to persecution’ if she were to return to her home residence, exceptional
hardship, and other scenarios with very high standards that not everyone can
meet. But physicians have a friend in
‘Conrad’.
The ‘Conrad 30’ program is designed specifically for
physicians who desire a waiver of the 2-year home residency requirement. Each state runs its own ‘Conrad 30’ program
with its own set of guidelines, but there are a few fundamental terms that all
‘Conrad 30’ programs share; among those are that a physician must be willing to
serve at least 3 years in H-1B visa status working at least 40 hours/week in a federally-designated
medically underserved area providing primary care – and sometimes specialty
care – to the underserved population.
You already know why it’s named ‘Conrad’; the ‘30’ stands for the number
of slots available in each state for physicians willing to serve in these
medically underserved areas.
Although there are some other programs that provide
‘waivers’ for physicians in J-1 visa status, (for example, Appalachian Regional
Commission, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, U.S. Dept. of Veterans
Affairs, etc.), these other programs have narrow restrictions that limit their
availability. It is recognized that the
Conrad 30 program is likely the most useful waiver program for physicians in
J-1 status.
However, the original Conrad 30 program had a ‘sunset’ date
that has been extended by Congress to keep the program alive for years.
Unless you’ve been in a coma for the past several years, you
must recognize that the volatility and rancor of our elected leaders in
Congress make the prognosis of their cooperation on an immigration bill
anything but certain.
This year presents a
risk that the program will die due to the negligence – and perhaps the
intentional refusal of care - of our politicians.
The good news is that Senators Klobuchar of Minnesota and
Heitkamp of North Dakota have introduced a Bill in the Senate, (S. 1189) that
not only extends the life of the Conrad 30 program, but makes it a permanent
federal law by removing the ‘sunset’ provisions.
Known as the ‘Conrad State 30 and Physician Access Act’,
this bill would also clarify certain elements of the National Interest Waiver
for physicians and permitting the spouses of H-1B visa-holding physicians to
change status to other types of visas besides the ‘H-4’ derivative visa, among
other things.
The ‘Conrad State 30’ Program is a powerful incentive for
healthcare systems in rural, urban and other medically underserved areas to
attract and keep physicians to care for communities in need of primary care
medical services. Many healthcare
systems rely heavily upon the benefits of the Conrad 30 program to staff their
hospitals and facilities - and foreign medical graduates recognize the valuable
benefit it provides for them; its demise would impact these communities
disproportionately.
So if you were waiting for the right opportunity to contact
your U.S. Senator or Representative on an issue that overwhelmingly affects the health of
small, rural communities, this would be a good time to ask for their support of
Senate Bill 1189 – before it’s too late.
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