The 5 percent problem: the low value of primary care
I spent 11 years becoming a family physician.
Four years in undergrad, four in medical school, three more in residency.
That’s a decade of delayed income and about $300,000 in debt, all for the privilege of practicing in one of the most critical, underappreciated corners of medicine: primary care.
I came out idealistic. I wanted to build relationships, prevent disease, and guide people through the chaos of a broken system. But I quickly …
The 5 percent problem: the low value of primary care

















