The International Medical Graduate Paradox
Christian Miguel de Virgilio, Leigh A Neumayer, R Matthew Walsh, Raul Rosenthal, Kamal MF Itani, Anthony Charles, Mary E. Klingensmith, Jeffrey B. MatthewsBackground:
International medical graduates (IMGs) play a critical role in the United States physician workforce and are essential to sustaining access to surgical care, particularly in underserved communities. Despite their contributions, IMGs pursuing surgical training continue to face significant systemic, financial, cultural, and institutional barriers.
Objective:
To examine the historical role, workforce contributions, challenges, and future implications of IMGs within the U.S. surgical workforce and identify opportunities to better support their integration into surgical training and practice.
Summary of Background Data:
IMGs comprise a substantial portion of the U.S. physician workforce but remain underrepresented in many surgical specialties. Persistent barriers include licensing requirements, financial burden, limited access to clinical and research opportunities, visa restrictions, bias within training environments, and reduced match success rates compared with U.S. medical graduates.
Methods:
This article synthesizes presentations from the American Surgical Association Inclusive Excellence Forum and incorporates current literature regarding IMG participation in U.S. surgical education, workforce trends, residency training, and professional advancement.
Results:
IMGs contribute significantly to clinical care, academic medicine, healthcare leadership, and culturally competent patient care. However, structural barriers within recruitment, credentialing, residency training pathways, and immigration processes continue to limit equitable access to surgical careers. Preliminary surgical positions, visa-related constraints, and cultural bias remain major challenges affecting IMG trainees and practicing surgeons.
Conclusions:
IMGs are indispensable to the future of the U.S. surgical workforce. Institutional support, mentorship, equitable recruitment practices, expanded residency opportunities, and immigration policy reform are necessary to strengthen IMG integration and ensure continued access to high-quality surgical care.